Systems, methods and compositions for sequence manipulation with optimized functional crispr-cas systems

ABSTRACT

The invention provides for systems, methods, and compositions for altering expression of target gene sequences and related gene products. Provided are structural information on the Cas protein of the CRISPR-Cas system, use of this information in generating modified components of the CRISPR complex, vectors and vector systems which encode one or more components or modified components of a CRISPR complex, as well as methods for the design and use of such vectors and components. Also provided are methods of directing CRISPR complex formation in eukaryotic cells and methods for utilizing the CRISPR-Cas system. In particular the present invention comprehends optimized functional CRISPR-Cas enzyme systems.

RELATED APPLICATIONS AND INCORPORATION BY REFERENCE

This application is a Continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16/592,744, filed on Oct. 3, 2019, which is a Divisional application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/179,912, filed on Jun. 10, 2016, which is a Continuation-in-Part of International Application No. PCT/US14/70175, filed on Dec. 12, 2014, which published as PCT Publication No. WO2015/089486 on Jun. 18, 2015. This application claims priority from US Provisional Patent Application Nos. 61/915,251, filed on Dec. 12, 2013; 61/915,267, filed on Dec. 12, 2013; 61/930,214, filed on Jan. 22, 2014; 61/939,256, filed on Feb. 12, 2014; 61/939,242, filed on Feb. 12, 2014; 61/980,012, filed on Apr. 15, 2014; 62/055,484, filed on Sep. 25, 2014; and, 62/087,537, filed on Dec. 4, 2014.

The foregoing applications, and all documents cited therein or during their prosecution (“appln cited documents”) and all documents cited or referenced in the appln cited documents, and all documents cited or referenced herein (“herein cited documents”), and all documents cited or referenced in herein cited documents, together with any manufacturer's instructions, descriptions, product specifications, and product sheets for any products mentioned herein or in any document incorporated by reference herein, are hereby incorporated herein by reference, and may be employed in the practice of the invention. More specifically, all referenced documents are incorporated by reference to the same extent as if each individual document was specifically and individually indicated to be incorporated by reference.

STATEMENT AS TO FEDERALLY SPONSORED RESEARCH

This invention was made with government support under Grant No. MH100706, awarded by the National Institutes of Health. The government has certain rights in the invention.

This invention was made with government support under PRESTO (Precursory Research for Embryonic Science and Technology, Sakigake) in the field of “Structural life science and advanced core technologies for innovative life science research”, awarded by JST (Japan Science and Technology Agency) in 2012. JST has certain rights in the invention.

This invention was made with government support under the field of “Development of New CRISPR Cas9 System Set and Its Medical Application”, awarded by Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT) in 2014. MEXT has certain rights in the invention.

SEQUENCE LISTING

The instant application contains a Sequence Listing which has been submitted electronically in XML file format and is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety. Said XML copy created, Jul. 24, 2023, is named 114203-6056_SL.xml is 1,106,243 bytes in size.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention generally relates to systems, methods and compositions used for the control of gene expression involving sequence targeting, such as genome perturbation or gene-editing, that may use vector systems related to Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats (CRISPR) and components thereof. In particular the present invention comprehends optimized functional CRISPR-Cas enzyme systems.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Recent advances in genome sequencing techniques and analysis methods have significantly accelerated the ability to catalog and map genetic factors associated with a diverse range of biological functions and diseases. Precise genome targeting technologies are needed to enable systematic reverse engineering of causal genetic variations by allowing selective perturbation of individual genetic elements, as well as to advance synthetic biology, biotechnological, and medical applications. Although genome-editing techniques such as designer zinc fingers, transcription activator-like effectors (TALEs), or homing meganucleases are available for producing targeted genome perturbations, there remains a need for new genome engineering technologies that are affordable, easy to set up, scalable, and amenable to targeting multiple positions within the eukaryotic genome.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

There exists a pressing need for alternative and robust systems and techniques for sequence targeting with a wide array of applications. This invention addresses this need and provides related advantages. The CRISPR/Cas or the CRISPR-Cas system (both terms are used interchangeably throughout this application) does not require the generation of customized proteins to target specific sequences but rather a single Cas enzyme can be programmed by a short RNA molecule to recognize a specific DNA target, in other words the Cas enzyme can be recruited to a specific DNA target using said short RNA molecule. Adding the CRISPR-Cas system to the repertoire of genome sequencing techniques and analysis methods may significantly simplify the methodology and accelerate the ability to catalog and map genetic factors associated with a diverse range of biological functions and diseases. To utilize the CRISPR-Cas system effectively for genome editing without deleterious effects, it is critical to understand aspects of engineering and optimization of these genome engineering tools, which are aspects of the claimed invention.

In an aspect the invention provides a non-naturally occurring or engineered composition comprising a guide RNA (sgRNA) comprising a guide sequence capable of hybridizing to a target sequence in a genomic locus of interest in a cell, wherein at least one loop of the sgRNA is modified by the insertion of distinct RNA sequence(s) that bind to one or more adaptor proteins, and wherein the adaptor protein is associated with one or more functional domains. And when there is more than one functional domain, the functional domains can be same or different, e.g., two of the same or two different activators or repressors. In an aspect the invention provides a non-naturally occurring or engineered CRISPR-Cas complex composition comprising the herein-mentioned sgRNA and a CRISPR enzyme. In an aspect the invention provides a herein-mentioned non-naturally occurring or engineered CRISPR-Cas complex composition wherein: the CRISPR enzyme comprises at least one mutation, such that the CRISPR enzyme has no more than 5% of the nuclease activity of the CRISPR enzyme not having the at least one mutation; and/or at least one or more nuclear localization sequences.

In an aspect the invention provides the herein-mentioned sgRNA or the CRISPR-Cas complex wherein one or more adaptor proteins associated with one or more functional domains is present and bound to the distinct RNA sequence(s) inserted into the at least one loop of the sgRNA.

In an aspect the invention provides a non-naturally occurring or engineered composition comprising: one or more guide RNA (sgRNA) comprising a guide sequence capable of hybridizing to a target sequence in a genomic locus of interest in a cell, a CRISPR enzyme comprising at least one or more nuclear localization sequences, wherein the CRISPR enzyme comprises at least one mutation, such that the CRISPR enzyme has no more than 5% of the nuclease activity of the CRISPR enzyme not having the at least one mutation, wherein at least one loop of at least one sgRNA is modified by the insertion of distinct RNA sequence(s) that bind to one or more adaptor proteins, and wherein the adaptor protein is associated with one or more functional domains.

In an aspect the invention provides any herein-mentioned composition wherein the CRISPR enzyme has a diminished nuclease activity of at least 97%, or 100% as compared with the CRISPR enzyme not having the at least one mutation. In an aspect the invention provides any aforementioned composition wherein the CRISPR enzyme comprises two or more mutations wherein two or more of D10, E762, H840, N854, N863, or D986 according to SpCas9 protein or any corresponding ortholog or N580 according to SaCas9 protein are mutated, or the CRISPR enzyme comprises at least one mutation wherein at least H840 is mutated. In an aspect the invention provides a herein-mentioned composition wherein the CRISPR enzyme comprises two or more mutations comprising D10A, E762A, H840A, N854A, N863A or D986A according to SpCas9 protein or any corresponding ortholog, or N580A according to SaCas9 protein, or at least one mutation comprising H840A. In an aspect the invention provides any herein-mentioned composition wherein the CRISPR enzyme comprises H840A, or D10A and H840A, or D10A and N863A, according to SpCas9 protein or any corresponding ortholog. In an aspect the invention provides any herein-mentioned composition wherein the CRISPR enzyme comprises: N580A according to SaCas9 protein or any corresponding ortholog; or D10A according to SpCas9 protein, or any corresponding ortholog, and N580A according to SaCas9 protein.

In an aspect the invention provides any herein-mentioned composition wherein the CRISPR enzyme is associated with one or more functional domains. In an aspect the invention provides any herein-mentioned composition wherein the one or more functional domains associated with the adaptor protein is a heterologous functional domain. In an aspect the invention provides any herein-mentioned composition wherein the one or more functional domains associated with the CRISPR enzyme is a heterologous functional domain.

In an aspect the invention provides a composition as herein discussed, wherein the adaptor protein is a fusion protein comprising the functional domain, the fusion protein optionally comprising a linker between the adaptor protein and the functional domain, the linker optionally including a GlySer linker.

In an aspect the invention provides a composition as herein discussed composition of any one of the preceding claims, wherein the at least one loop of the sgRNA is not modified by the insertion of distinct RNA sequence(s) that bind to one or more adaptor proteins and wherein, optionally one of the unmodified sgRNA loops is either one of the tetraloop or the stem-loop 2.

In an aspect the invention provides a composition as herein discussed wherein the one or more functional domains associated with the adaptor protein is a transcriptional activation domain.

In an aspect the invention provides a composition as herein discussed wherein the one or more functional domains associated with the CRISPR enzyme is a transcriptional activation domain.

In an aspect the invention provides a composition as herein discussed wherein the one or more functional domains associated with the adaptor protein is a transcriptional activation domain comprising VP64, p65, MyoD1, HSF1, RTA or SET7/9. Other references herein to activation (or activator) domains in respect of those associated with the adaptor protein(s) include any known transcriptional activation domain and specifically VP64, p65, MyoD1, HSF1, RTA or SET7/9.

In an aspect the invention provides a composition as herein discussed wherein the one or more functional domains associated with the CRISPR enzyme is a transcriptional activation domain comprises VP64, p65, MyoD1, HSF1, RTA and SET7/9. Other references herein to activation (or activator) domains in respect of those associated with the CRISPR enzyme include any known transcriptional activation domain and specifically VP64, p65, MyoD1, HSF1, RTA or SET7/9.

In an aspect the invention provides a composition as herein discussed wherein the one or more functional domains associated with the adaptor protein is a transcriptional repressor domain.

In an aspect the invention provides a composition as herein discussed wherein the one or more functional domains associated with the CRISPR enzyme is a transcriptional repressor domain.

In an aspect the invention provides a composition as herein discussed wherein the transcriptional repressor domain is a KRAB domain.

In an aspect the invention provides a composition as herein discussed wherein the transcriptional repressor domain is a NuE domain, NcoR domain, SID domain or a SID4X domain.

In an aspect the invention provides a composition as herein discussed wherein the one or more functional domains associated with the adaptor protein have one or more activities comprising methylase activity, demethylase activity, transcription activation activity, transcription repression activity, transcription release factor activity, histone modification activity, RNA cleavage activity, DNA cleavage activity, DNA integration activity or nucleic acid binding activity.

In an aspect the invention provides a composition as herein discussed wherein the one or more functional domains associated with the CRISPR enzyme have one or more activities comprising methylase activity, demethylase activity, transcription activation activity, transcription repression activity, transcription release factor activity, histone modification activity, RNA cleavage activity, DNA cleavage activity, DNA integration activity, nucleic acid binding activity, or molecular switch activity or chemical inducibility or light inducibility.

Histone modifying domains are also preferred in some embodiments. Exemplary histone modifying domains are discussed below. Transposase domains, HR (Homologous Recombination) machinery domains, recombinase domains, and/or integrase domains are also preferred as the present functional domains. In some embodiments, DNA integration activity includes HR machinery domains, integrase domains, recombinase domains and/or transposase domains.

In an aspect the invention provides a composition as herein discussed wherein the DNA cleavage activity is due to a nuclease

In an aspect the invention provides a composition as herein discussed wherein the nuclease comprises a Fok1 nuclease.

In an aspect the invention provides a composition as herein discussed wherein the one or more functional domains is attached to the CRISPR enzyme so that upon binding to the sgRNA and target the functional domain is in a spatial orientation allowing for the functional domain to function in its attributed function.

In an aspect the invention provides a composition as herein discussed wherein the one or more functional domains is attached to the CRISPR enzyme via a linker, optionally a GlySer linker. In an aspect the invention provides a composition as herein discussed, wherein the sgRNA is modified so that, after sgRNA binds the adaptor protein and further binds to the CRISPR enzyme and target, the functional domain is in a spatial orientation allowing for the functional domain to function in its attributed function.

In an aspect the invention provides a composition as herein discussed wherein the at least one loop of the sgRNA is tetraloop and/or loop2.

In an aspect the invention provides a composition as herein discussed wherein the tetraloop and loop 2 of the sgRNA are modified by the insertion of the distinct RNA sequence(s).

In an aspect the invention provides a composition as herein discussed wherein the insertion of distinct RNA sequence(s) that bind to one or more adaptor proteins is an aptamer sequence.

In an aspect the invention provides a composition as herein discussed wherein the aptamer sequence is two or more aptamer sequences specific to the same adaptor protein.

In an aspect the invention provides a composition as herein discussed wherein the aptamer sequence is two or more aptamer sequences specific to different adaptor proteins.

In an aspect the invention provides a composition as herein discussed wherein the adaptor protein comprises MS2, PP7, Qβ, F2, GA, fr, JP501, M12, R17, BZ13, JP34, JP500, KU1, M11, MX1, TW18, VK, SP, FI, ID2, NL95, TW19, AP205, ϕCb5, ϕCb8r, ϕCb12r, ϕCb23r, 7s, PRR1.

In an aspect the invention provides a composition as herein discussed wherein the cell is a eukaryotic cell, optionally a mammalian cell.

In an aspect the invention provides a composition as herein discussed wherein the cell is a human cell or a mouse cell.

In an aspect the invention provides a mammalian cell as herein discussed, e.g., wherein the cell comprises a cell line and is, optionally, a human cell line or a mouse cell line.

In an aspect the invention provides a transgenic mammalian model, optionally a mouse, e.g., wherein the model has been transformed with a composition as herein discussed or is progeny of said transformant.

In an aspect the invention provides a method for introducing a genomic locus event comprising the administration of to a host or expression in a host one or more of the compositions as herein discussed.

In an aspect the invention provides a method as herein discussed, wherein the genomic locus event comprises affecting gene activation, gene inhibition, or cleavage in the locus, or insertion of DNA.

In an aspect the invention provides a method as herein discussed, comprising the delivery of the composition or nucleic acid molecule(s) coding therefor, wherein said nucleic acid molecule(s) are operatively linked to regulatory sequence(s) and expressed in vivo. Expression in vivo can be via a lentivirus, an adenovirus, or an AAV.

In an aspect the invention provides a vector comprising: a nucleic acid molecule encoding a guide RNA (sgRNA), comprising a regulatory element operable in a eukaryotic cell including a guide sequence (sgRNA) operably linked to a promoter, the sgRNA being capable of hybridizing to a target sequence in a genomic locus of interest in a cell, wherein at least one loop of the sgRNA is modified by the insertion of distinct RNA sequence(s) that bind to one or more adaptor proteins.

In an aspect the invention provides a vector comprising a regulatory element operable in a eukaryotic cell including a nucleic acid molecule encoding a CRISPR enzyme operably linked to a promoter, the enzyme comprising at least one or more nuclear localization sequences, wherein the CRISPR enzyme comprises at least one mutation, such that the CRISPR enzyme has no more than 5% of the nuclease activity of the CRISPR enzyme not having the at least one mutation, and wherein the CRISPR enzyme is associated with one or more functional domains.

In an aspect the invention provides nucleic acid molecule(s) encoding sgRNA or the CRISPR-Cas complex or a composition as herein discussed.

In an aspect the invention provides a method of screening for gain of function (GOF) or loss of function (LOF) comprising the cell line or cells of the model herein-discussed containing or expressing Cas9 and introducing a composition of claim 1 into cells of the cell line or model, whereby the sgRNA includes either an activator or a repressor, and monitoring for GOF or LOF respectively as to those cells as to which the introduced sgRNA includes an activator or as to those cells as to which the introduced sgRNA includes a repressor.

In an aspect there is provided a CRISPR Cas complex comprising a CRISPR enzyme and a guide RNA (sgRNA), wherein the CRISPR enzyme comprises at least one mutation, such that the CRISPR enzyme has no more than 5% of the nuclease activity of the CRISPR enzyme not having the at least one mutation and, optional, at least one or more nuclear localization sequences; the guide RNA (sgRNA) comprises a guide sequence capable of hybridizing to a target sequence in a genomic locus of interest in a cell; and wherein: the CRISPR enzyme is associated with two or more functional domains, which may be the same or different, and are preferably different functional domains; or at least one loop of the sgRNA is modified by the insertion of distinct RNA sequence(s) that bind to one or more adaptor proteins, and wherein the adaptor protein is associated with two or more functional domains; or the CRISPR enzyme is associated with one or more functional domains and at least one loop of the sgRNA is modified by the insertion of distinct RNA sequence(s) that bind to one or more adaptor proteins, and wherein the adaptor protein is associated with one or more functional domains.

In an aspect the invention provides a herein-discussed composition wherein the CRISPR enzyme includes one or more functional domains. In such a composition there can be more than one sgRNA, and the sgRNAs target different sequences whereby when the composition is employed, there is multiplexing. The composition can include more than one sgRNA modified by the insertion of distinct RNA sequence(s) that bind to one or more adaptor proteins. The composition can involve wherein one or more adaptor proteins associated with one or more functional domains is present and bound to the distinct RNA sequence(s) inserted into the at least one loop of the sgRNA.

In one aspect, the invention provides a method for altering or modifying expression of a gene product. The said method may comprise introducing into a cell containing and expressing a DNA molecule encoding the gene product an engineered, non-naturally occurring CRISPR-Cas system comprising a Cas protein and guide RNA that targets the DNA molecule, whereby the guide RNA targets the DNA molecule encoding the gene product and the Cas protein cleaves the DNA molecule encoding the gene product, whereby expression of the gene product is altered; and, wherein the Cas protein and the guide RNA do not naturally occur together. The invention comprehends the guide RNA comprising a guide sequence fused to a tracr sequence. The invention further comprehends the Cas protein being codon optimized for expression in a Eukaryotic cell. In a preferred embodiment the Eukaryotic cell is a mammalian cell and in a more preferred embodiment the mammalian cell is a human cell. In a further embodiment of the invention, the expression of the gene product is decreased.

In an aspect, in herein-discussed compositions, the target sequence(s) can be non-coding or regulatory (including promoter, especially the proximal promoter) or enhancer or silencer sequence(s).

In one aspect, the invention provides an engineered, non-naturally occurring CRISPR-Cas system comprising a Cas protein and a guide RNA that targets a DNA molecule encoding a gene product in a cell, whereby the guide RNA targets the DNA molecule encoding the gene product and the Cas protein cleaves the DNA molecule encoding the gene product, whereby expression of the gene product is altered; and, wherein the Cas protein and the guide RNA do not naturally occur together. The invention comprehends the guide RNA comprising a guide sequence fused to a tracr sequence. In an embodiment of the invention the Cas protein is a type II CRISPR-Cas protein and in a preferred embodiment the Cas protein is a Cas9 protein. The invention further comprehends the Cas protein being codon optimized for expression in a Eukaryotic cell. In a preferred embodiment the Eukaryotic cell is a mammalian cell and in a more preferred embodiment the mammalian cell is a human cell. In a further embodiment of the invention, the expression of the gene product is decreased.

In another aspect, the invention provides an engineered, non-naturally occurring vector system comprising one or more vectors comprising a first regulatory element operably linked to a CRISPR-Cas system guide RNA that targets a DNA molecule encoding a gene product and a second regulatory element operably linked to a Cas protein. Components (a) and (b) may be located on same or different vectors of the system. The guide RNA targets the DNA molecule encoding the gene product in a cell and the Cas protein cleaves the DNA molecule encoding the gene product, whereby expression of the gene product is altered; and, wherein the Cas protein and the guide RNA do not naturally occur together. The invention comprehends the guide RNA comprising a guide sequence fused to a tracr sequence. In an embodiment of the invention the Cas protein is a type II CRISPR-Cas protein and in a preferred embodiment the Cas protein is a Cas9 protein. The invention further comprehends the Cas protein being codon optimized for expression in a Eukaryotic cell. In a preferred embodiment the Eukaryotic cell is a mammalian cell and in a more preferred embodiment the mammalian cell is a human cell. In a further embodiment of the invention, the expression of the gene product is decreased.

In one aspect, the invention provides a vector system comprising one or more vectors. In some embodiments, the system comprises: (a) a first regulatory element operably linked to a tracr mate sequence and one or more insertion sites for inserting one or more guide sequences upstream of the tracr mate sequence, wherein when expressed, the guide sequence directs sequence-specific binding of a CRISPR complex to a target sequence in a eukaryotic cell, wherein the CRISPR complex comprises a CRISPR enzyme complexed with (1) the guide sequence that is hybridized to the target sequence, and (2) the tracr mate sequence that is hybridized to the tracr sequence; and (b) a second regulatory element operably linked to an enzyme-coding sequence encoding said CRISPR enzyme comprising a nuclear localization sequence; wherein components (a) and (b) are located on the same or different vectors of the system. In some embodiments, component (a) further comprises the tracr sequence downstream of the tracr mate sequence under the control of the first regulatory element. In some embodiments, component (a) further comprises two or more guide sequences operably linked to the first regulatory element, wherein when expressed, each of the two or more guide sequences direct sequence specific binding of a CRISPR complex to a different target sequence in a eukaryotic cell. In some embodiments, the system comprises the tracr sequence under the control of a third regulatory element, such as a polymerase III promoter. In some embodiments, the tracr sequence exhibits at least 50%, 60%, 70%, 80%, 90%, 95%, or 99% of sequence complementarity along the length of the tracr mate sequence when optimally aligned. Determining optimal alignment is within the purview of one of skill in the art. For example, there are publically and commercially available alignment algorithms and programs such as, but not limited to, ClustalW, Smith-Waterman in matlab, Bowtie, Geneious, Biopython and SeqMan. In some embodiments, the CRISPR complex comprises one or more nuclear localization sequences of sufficient strength to drive accumulation of said CRISPR complex in a detectable amount in the nucleus of a eukaryotic cell. Without wishing to be bound by theory, it is believed that a nuclear localization sequence is not necessary for CRISPR complex activity in eukaryotes, but that including such sequences enhances activity of the system, especially as to targeting nucleic acid molecules in the nucleus. In some embodiments, the CRISPR enzyme is a type II CRISPR system enzyme. In some embodiments, the CRISPR enzyme is a Cas9 enzyme. In some embodiments, the Cas9 enzyme is S. pneumoniae, S. pyogenes, or S. thermophilus Cas9, and may include mutated Cas9 derived from these organisms. The enzyme may be a Cas9 homolog or ortholog. In some embodiments, the CRISPR enzyme is codon-optimized for expression in a eukaryotic cell. In some embodiments, the CRISPR enzyme directs cleavage of one or two strands at the location of the target sequence. In some embodiments, the first regulatory element is a polymerase III promoter. In some embodiments, the second regulatory element is a polymerase II promoter. In some embodiments, the guide sequence is at least 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 25 nucleotides, or between 10-30, or between 15-25, or between 15-20 nucleotides in length. In general, and throughout this specification, the term “vector” refers to a nucleic acid molecule capable of transporting another nucleic acid to which it has been linked. Vectors include, but are not limited to, nucleic acid molecules that are single-stranded, double-stranded, or partially double-stranded; nucleic acid molecules that comprise one or more free ends, no free ends (e.g. circular); nucleic acid molecules that comprise DNA, RNA, or both; and other varieties of polynucleotides known in the art. One type of vector is a “plasmid,” which refers to a circular double stranded DNA loop into which additional DNA segments can be inserted, such as by standard molecular cloning techniques. Another type of vector is a viral vector, wherein virally-derived DNA or RNA sequences are present in the vector for packaging into a virus (e.g. retroviruses, replication defective retroviruses, adenoviruses, replication defective adenoviruses, and adeno-associated viruses). Viral vectors also include polynucleotides carried by a virus for transfection into a host cell. Certain vectors are capable of autonomous replication in a host cell into which they are introduced (e.g. bacterial vectors having a bacterial origin of replication and episomal mammalian vectors). Other vectors (e.g., non-episomal mammalian vectors) are integrated into the genome of a host cell upon introduction into the host cell, and thereby are replicated along with the host genome. Moreover, certain vectors are capable of directing the expression of genes to which they are operatively-linked. Such vectors are referred to herein as “expression vectors.” Common expression vectors of utility in recombinant DNA techniques are often in the form of plasmids.

Recombinant expression vectors can comprise a nucleic acid of the invention in a form suitable for expression of the nucleic acid in a host cell, which means that the recombinant expression vectors include one or more regulatory elements, which may be selected on the basis of the host cells to be used for expression, that is operatively-linked to the nucleic acid sequence to be expressed. Within a recombinant expression vector, “operably linked” is intended to mean that the nucleotide sequence of interest is linked to the regulatory element(s) in a manner that allows for expression of the nucleotide sequence (e.g. in an in vitro transcription/translation system or in a host cell when the vector is introduced into the host cell).

The term “regulatory element” is intended to include promoters, enhancers, internal ribosomal entry sites (IRES), and other expression control elements (e.g. transcription termination signals, such as polyadenylation signals and poly-U sequences). Such regulatory elements are described, for example, in Goeddel, GENE EXPRESSION TECHNOLOGY: METHODS IN ENZYMOLOGY 185, Academic Press, San Diego, Calif. (1990). Regulatory elements include those that direct constitutive expression of a nucleotide sequence in many types of host cell and those that direct expression of the nucleotide sequence only in certain host cells (e.g., tissue-specific regulatory sequences). A tissue-specific promoter may direct expression primarily in a desired tissue of interest, such as muscle, neuron, bone, skin, blood, specific organs (e.g. liver, pancreas), or particular cell types (e.g. lymphocytes). Regulatory elements may also direct expression in a temporal-dependent manner, such as in a cell-cycle dependent or developmental stage-dependent manner, which may or may not also be tissue or cell-type specific. In some embodiments, a vector comprises one or more pol III promoter (e.g. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, or more pol I promoters), one or more pol II promoters (e.g. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, or more pol II promoters), one or more pol I promoters (e.g. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, or more pol I promoters), or combinations thereof. Examples of pol III promoters include, but are not limited to, U6 and H1 promoters. Examples of pol II promoters include, but are not limited to, the retroviral Rous sarcoma virus (RSV) LTR promoter (optionally with the RSV enhancer), the cytomegalovirus (CMV) promoter (optionally with the CMV enhancer) [see, e.g., Boshart et al, Cell, 41:521-530 (1985)], the SV40 promoter, the dihydrofolate reductase promoter, the 3-actin promoter, the phosphoglycerol kinase (PGK) promoter, and the EF1α promoter. Also encompassed by the term “regulatory element” are enhancer elements, such as WPRE; CMV enhancers; the R-U5′ segment in LTR of HTLV-I (Mol. Cell. Biol., Vol. 8(1), p. 466-472, 1988); SV40 enhancer; and the intron sequence between exons 2 and 3 of rabbit β-globin (Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA., Vol. 78(3), p. 1527-31, 1981). It will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that the design of the expression vector can depend on such factors as the choice of the host cell to be transformed, the level of expression desired, etc. A vector can be introduced into host cells to thereby produce transcripts, proteins, or peptides, including fusion proteins or peptides, encoded by nucleic acids as described herein (e.g., clustered regularly interspersed short palindromic repeats (CRISPR) transcripts, proteins, enzymes, mutant forms thereof, fusion proteins thereof, etc.).

Advantageous vectors include lentiviruses and adeno-associated viruses, and types of such vectors can also be selected for targeting particular types of cells.

In one aspect, the invention provides a eukaryotic host cell comprising (a) a first regulatory element operably linked to a tracr mate sequence and one or more insertion sites for inserting one or more guide sequences upstream of the tracr mate sequence, wherein when expressed, the guide sequence directs sequence-specific binding of a CRISPR complex to a target sequence in a eukaryotic cell, wherein the CRISPR complex comprises a CRISPR enzyme complexed with (1) the guide sequence that is hybridized to the target sequence, and (2) the tracr mate sequence that is hybridized to the tracr sequence; and/or (b) a second regulatory element operably linked to an enzyme-coding sequence encoding said CRISPR enzyme comprising a nuclear localization sequence. In some embodiments, the host cell comprises components (a) and (b). In some embodiments, component (a), component (b), or components (a) and (b) are stably integrated into a genome of the host eukaryotic cell. In some embodiments, component (a) further comprises the tracr sequence downstream of the tracr mate sequence under the control of the first regulatory element. In some embodiments, component (a) further comprises two or more guide sequences operably linked to the first regulatory element, wherein when expressed, each of the two or more guide sequences direct sequence specific binding of a CRISPR complex to a different target sequence in a eukaryotic cell. In some embodiments, the eukaryotic host cell further comprises a third regulatory element, such as a polymerase III promoter, operably linked to said tracr sequence. In some embodiments, the tracr sequence exhibits at least 50%, 60%, 70%, 80%, 90%, 95%, or 99% of sequence complementarity along the length of the tracr mate sequence when optimally aligned. The enzyme may be a Cas9 homolog or ortholog. In some embodiments, the CRISPR enzyme is codon-optimized for expression in a eukaryotic cell. In some embodiments, the CRISPR enzyme directs cleavage of one or two strands at the location of the target sequence. In some embodiments, the CRISPR enzyme lacks DNA strand cleavage activity. In some embodiments, the first regulatory element is a polymerase III promoter. In some embodiments, the second regulatory element is a polymerase II promoter. In some embodiments, the guide sequence is at least 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 25 nucleotides, or between 10-30, or between 15-25, or between 15-20 nucleotides in length. In an aspect, the invention provides a non-human eukaryotic organism; preferably a multicellular eukaryotic organism, comprising a eukaryotic host cell according to any of the described embodiments. In other aspects, the invention provides a eukaryotic organism; preferably a multicellular eukaryotic organism, comprising a eukaryotic host cell according to any of the described embodiments. The organism in some embodiments of these aspects may be an animal; for example a mammal. Also, the organism may be an arthropod such as an insect. The organism also may be a plant. Further, the organism may be a fungus.

In one aspect, the invention provides a kit comprising one or more of the components described herein. In some embodiments, the kit comprises a vector system and instructions for using the kit. In some embodiments, the vector system comprises (a) a first regulatory element operably linked to a tracr mate sequence and one or more insertion sites for inserting one or more guide sequences upstream of the tracr mate sequence, wherein when expressed, the guide sequence directs sequence-specific binding of a CRISPR complex to a target sequence in a eukaryotic cell, wherein the CRISPR complex comprises a CRISPR enzyme complexed with (1) the guide sequence that is hybridized to the target sequence, and (2) the tracr mate sequence that is hybridized to the tracr sequence; and/or (b) a second regulatory element operably linked to an enzyme-coding sequence encoding said CRISPR enzyme comprising a nuclear localization sequence. In some embodiments, the kit comprises components (a) and (b) located on the same or different vectors of the system. In some embodiments, component (a) further comprises the tracr sequence downstream of the tracr mate sequence under the control of the first regulatory element. In some embodiments, component (a) further comprises two or more guide sequences operably linked to the first regulatory element, wherein when expressed, each of the two or more guide sequences direct sequence specific binding of a CRISPR complex to a different target sequence in a eukaryotic cell. In some embodiments, the system further comprises a third regulatory element, such as a polymerase III promoter, operably linked to said tracr sequence. In some embodiments, the tracr sequence exhibits at least 50%, 60%, 70%, 80%, 90%, 95%, or 99% of sequence complementarity along the length of the tracr mate sequence when optimally aligned. In some embodiments, the CRISPR enzyme comprises one or more nuclear localization sequences of sufficient strength to drive accumulation of said CRISPR enzyme in a detectable amount in the nucleus of a eukaryotic cell. In some embodiments, the CRISPR enzyme is a type II CRISPR system enzyme. In some embodiments, the CRISPR enzyme is a Cas9 enzyme. In some embodiments, the Cas9 enzyme is S. pneumoniae, S. pyogenes or S. thermophilus Cas9, and may include mutated Cas9 derived from these organisms. The enzyme may be a Cas9 homolog or ortholog. In some embodiments, the CRISPR enzyme is codon-optimized for expression in a eukaryotic cell. In some embodiments, the CRISPR enzyme directs cleavage of one or two strands at the location of the target sequence. In some embodiments, the CRISPR enzyme lacks DNA strand cleavage activity. In some embodiments, the first regulatory element is a polymerase III promoter. In some embodiments, the second regulatory element is a polymerase II promoter. In some embodiments, the guide sequence is at least 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 25 nucleotides, or between 10-30, or between 15-25, or between 15-20 nucleotides in length.

In one aspect, the invention provides a method of modifying a target polynucleotide in a eukaryotic cell. In some embodiments, the method comprises allowing a CRISPR complex to bind to the target polynucleotide to effect cleavage of said target polynucleotide thereby modifying the target polynucleotide, wherein the CRISPR complex comprises a CRISPR enzyme complexed with a guide sequence hybridized to a target sequence within said target polynucleotide, wherein said guide sequence is linked to a tracr mate sequence which in turn hybridizes to a tracr sequence. In some embodiments, said cleavage comprises cleaving one or two strands at the location of the target sequence by said CRISPR enzyme. In some embodiments, said cleavage results in decreased transcription of a target gene. In some embodiments, the method further comprises repairing said cleaved target polynucleotide by homologous recombination with an exogenous template polynucleotide, wherein said repair results in a mutation comprising an insertion, deletion, or substitution of one or more nucleotides of said target polynucleotide. In some embodiments, said mutation results in one or more amino acid changes in a protein expressed from a gene comprising the target sequence. In some embodiments, the method further comprises delivering one or more vectors to said eukaryotic cell, wherein the one or more vectors drive expression of one or more of: the CRISPR enzyme, the guide sequence linked to the tracr mate sequence, and the tracr sequence. In some embodiments, said vectors are delivered to the eukaryotic cell in a subject. In some embodiments, said modifying takes place in said eukaryotic cell in a cell culture. In some embodiments, the method further comprises isolating said eukaryotic cell from a subject prior to said modifying. In some embodiments, the method further comprises returning said eukaryotic cell and/or cells derived therefrom to said subject.

In one aspect, the invention provides a method of modifying expression of a polynucleotide in a eukaryotic cell. In some embodiments, the method comprises allowing a CRISPR complex to bind to the polynucleotide such that said binding results in increased or decreased expression of said polynucleotide; wherein the CRISPR complex comprises a CRISPR enzyme complexed with a guide sequence hybridized to a target sequence within said polynucleotide, wherein said guide sequence is linked to a tracr mate sequence which in turn hybridizes to a tracr sequence. In some embodiments, the method further comprises delivering one or more vectors to said eukaryotic cells, wherein the one or more vectors drive expression of one or more of: the CRISPR enzyme, the guide sequence linked to the tracr mate sequence, and the tracr sequence.

In one aspect, the invention provides a method of generating a model eukaryotic cell comprising a mutated disease gene. In some embodiments, a disease gene is any gene associated an increase in the risk of having or developing a disease. In some embodiments, the method comprises (a) introducing one or more vectors into a eukaryotic cell, wherein the one or more vectors drive expression of one or more of: a CRISPR enzyme, a guide sequence linked to a tracr mate sequence, and a tracr sequence; and (b) allowing a CRISPR complex to bind to a target polynucleotide to effect cleavage of the target polynucleotide within said disease gene, wherein the CRISPR complex comprises the CRISPR enzyme complexed with (1) the guide sequence that is hybridized to the target sequence within the target polynucleotide, and (2) the tracr mate sequence that is hybridized to the tracr sequence, thereby generating a model eukaryotic cell comprising a mutated disease gene. In some embodiments, said cleavage comprises cleaving one or two strands at the location of the target sequence by said CRISPR enzyme. In some embodiments, said cleavage results in decreased transcription of a target gene. In some embodiments, the method further comprises repairing said cleaved target polynucleotide by homologous recombination with an exogenous template polynucleotide, wherein said repair results in a mutation comprising an insertion, deletion, or substitution of one or more nucleotides of said target polynucleotide. In some embodiments, said mutation results in one or more amino acid changes in a protein expression from a gene comprising the target sequence.

In one aspect, the invention provides a method for developing a biologically active agent that modulates a cell signaling event associated with a disease gene. In some embodiments, a disease gene is any gene associated with an increase in the risk of having or developing a disease. In some embodiments, the method comprises (a) contacting a test compound with a model cell of any one of the described embodiments; and (b) detecting a change in a readout that is indicative of a reduction or an augmentation of a cell signaling event associated with said mutation in said disease gene, thereby developing said biologically active agent that modulates said cell signaling event associated with said disease gene.

In one aspect, the invention provides a recombinant polynucleotide comprising a guide sequence upstream of a tracr mate sequence, wherein the guide sequence when expressed directs sequence-specific binding of a CRISPR complex to a corresponding target sequence present in a eukaryotic cell. In some embodiments, the target sequence is a viral sequence present in a eukaryotic cell. In some embodiments, the target sequence is a proto-oncogene or an oncogene.

In one aspect the invention provides for a method of selecting one or more cell(s) by introducing one or more mutations in a gene in the one or more cell (s), the method comprising: introducing one or more vectors into the cell (s), wherein the one or more vectors drive expression of one or more of: a CRISPR enzyme, a guide sequence linked to a tracr mate sequence, a tracr sequence, and an editing template; wherein the editing template comprises the one or more mutations that abolish CRISPR enzyme cleavage; allowing homologous recombination of the editing template with the target polynucleotide in the cell(s) to be selected; allowing a CRISPR complex to bind to a target polynucleotide to effect cleavage of the target polynucleotide within said gene, wherein the CRISPR complex comprises the CRISPR enzyme complexed with (1) the guide sequence that is hybridized to the target sequence within the target polynucleotide, and (2) the tracr mate sequence that is hybridized to the tracr sequence, wherein binding of the CRISPR complex to the target polynucleotide induces cell death, thereby allowing one or more cell(s) in which one or more mutations have been introduced to be selected. In a preferred embodiment, the CRISPR enzyme is Cas9. In another preferred embodiment of the invention the cell to be selected may be a eukaryotic cell. Aspects of the invention allow for selection of specific cells without requiring a selection marker or a two-step process that may include a counter-selection system.

In another aspect the invention comprehends a CRISPR-Cas9 (S. pyogenes) system having an X-ray diffraction pattern corresponding to or resulting from any or all of the foregoing and/or a crystal having the structure defined by the co-ordinates of the Crystral Structure Table in Example 8 (the CRISPR-cas9 crystal structure) or as further described in Example 12.

In a further aspect, the invention involves a computer-assisted method for identifying or designing potential compounds to fit within or bind to CRISPR-Cas9 system or a functional portion thereof or vice versa (a computer-assisted method for identifying or designing potential CRISPR-Cas9 systems or a functional portion thereof for binding to desired compounds) or a computer-assisted method for identifying or designing potential CRISPR-Cas9 systems (e.g., with regard to predicting areas of the CRISPR-Cas9 system to be able to be manipulated—for instance, based on crystral structure data or based on data of Cas9 orthologs, or with respect to where a functional group such as an activator or repressor can be attached to the CRISPR-Cas9 system, or as to Cas9 truncations or as to designing nickases), said method comprising:

-   -   using a computer system, e.g., a programmed computer comprising         a processor, a data storage system, an input device, and an         output device, the steps of:     -   (a) inputting into the programmed computer through said input         device data comprising the three-dimensional co-ordinates of a         subset of the atoms from or pertaining to the CRISPR-Cas9         crystal structure, e.g., in the CRISPR-Cas9 system binding         domain or alternatively or additionally in domains that vary         based on variance among Cas9 orthologs or as to Cas9s or as to         nickases or as to functional groups, optionally with structural         information from CRISPR-Cas9 system complex(es), thereby         generating a data set;     -   (b) comparing, using said processor, said data set to a computer         database of structures stored in said computer data storage         system, e.g., structures of compounds that bind or putatively         bind or that are desired to bind to a CRISPR-Cas9 system or as         to Cas9 orthologs (e.g., as Cas9s or as to domains or regions         that vary amongst Cas9 orthologs) or as to the CRISPR-Cas9         crystal structure or as to nickases or as to functional groups;     -   (c) selecting from said database, using computer methods,         structure(s)—e.g., CRISPR-Cas9 structures that may bind to         desired structures, desired structures that may bind to certain         CRISPR-Cas9 structures, portions of the CRISPR-Cas9 system that         may be manipulated, e.g., based on data from other portions of         the CRISPR-Cas9 crystral structure and/or from Cas9 orthologs,         truncated Cas9s, novel nickases or particular functional groups,         or positions for attaching functional groups or         functional-group-CRISPR-Cas9 systems;     -   (d) constructing, using computer methods, a model of the         selected structure(s); and     -   (e) outputting to said output device the selected structure(s);     -   and optionally synthesizing one or more of the selected         structure(s);     -   and further optionally testing said synthesized selected         structure(s) as or in a CRISPR-Cas9 system;     -   or, said method comprising: providing the co-ordinates of at         least two atoms of the CRISPR-Cas9 crystal structure, e.g., at         least two atoms of the herein Crystral Structure Table of the         CRISPR-Cas9 crystal structure or co-ordinates of at least a         sub-domain of the CRISPR-Cas9 crystral structure (“selected         co-ordinates”), providing the structure of a candidate         comprising a binding molecule or of portions of the CRISPR-Cas9         system that may be manipulated, e.g., based on data from other         portions of the CRISPR-Cas9 crystral structure and/or from Cas9         orthologs, or the structure of functional groups, and fitting         the structure of the candidate to the selected co-ordinates, to         thereby obtain product data comprising CRISPR-Cas9 structures         that may bind to desired structures, desired structures that may         bind to certain CRISPR-Cas9 structures, portions of the         CRISPR-Cas9 system that may be manipulated, truncated Cas9s,         novel nickases, or particular functional groups, or positions         for attaching functional groups or functional-group-CRISPR-Cas9         systems, with output thereof, and optionally synthesizing         compound(s) from said product data and further optionally         comprising testing said synthesized compound(s) as or in a         CRISPR-Cas9 system.

The testing can comprise analyzing the CRISPR-Cas9 system resulting from said synthesized selected structure(s), e.g., with respect to binding, or performing a desired function.

The output in the foregoing methods can comprise data transmission, e.g., transmission of information via telecommunication, telephone, video conference, mass communication, e.g., presentation such as a computer presentation (eg POWERPOINT), internet, email, documentary communication such as a computer program (eg WORD) document and the like. Accordingly, the invention also comprehends computer readable media containing: atomic co-ordinate data according to the herein Crystal Structure Table and/or the Figures, said data defining the three dimensional structure of CRISPR-Cas9 or at least one sub-domain thereof, or structure factor data for CRISPR-Cas9, said structure factor data being derivable from the atomic co-ordinate data of herein Crystal Structure Table and/or the Figures. The computer readable media can also contain any data of the foregoing methods. The invention further comprehends methods a computer system for generating or performing rational design as in the foregoing methods containing either: atomic co-ordinate data according to herein Crystal Structure Table and/or the Figures, said data defining the three dimensional structure of CRISPR-Cas9 or at least one sub-domain thereof, or structure factor data for CRISPR-Cas9, said structure factor data being derivable from the atomic co-ordinate data of herein Crystal Structure Table and/or the Figures. The invention further comprehends a method of doing business comprising providing to a user the computer system or the media or the three dimensional structure of CRISPR-Cas9 or at least one sub-domain thereof, or structure factor data for CRISPR-Cas9, said structure set forth in and said structure factor data being derivable from the atomic co-ordinate data of herein Crystal Structure Table and/or the Figures, or the herein computer media or a herein data transmission.

A “binding site” or an “active site” comprises or consists essentially of a site (such as an atom, a functional group of an amino acid residue or a plurality of such atoms and/or groups) in a binding cavity or region, which may bind to a compound such as a nucleic acid molecule, which is/are involved in binding.

By “fitting”, is meant determining by automatic, or semi-automatic means, interactions between one or more atoms of a candidate molecule and at least one atom of a structure of the invention, and calculating the extent to which such interactions are stable. Interactions include attraction and repulsion, brought about by charge, steric considerations and the like. Various computer-based methods for fitting are described further

By “root mean square (or rms) deviation”, we mean the square root of the arithmetic mean of the squares of the deviations from the mean.

By a “computer system”, is meant the hardware means, software means and data storage means used to analyze atomic coordinate data. The minimum hardware means of the computer-based systems of the present invention typically comprises a central processing unit (CPU), input means, output means and data storage means. Desirably a display or monitor is provided to visualize structure data. The data storage means may be RAM or means for accessing computer readable media of the invention. Examples of such systems are computer and tablet devices running Unix, Windows or Apple operating systems.

By “computer readable media”, is meant any medium or media, which can be read and accessed directly or indirectly by a computer e.g. so that the media is suitable for use in the above-mentioned computer system. Such media include, but are not limited to: magnetic storage media such as floppy discs, hard disc storage medium and magnetic tape; optical storage media such as optical discs or CD-ROM; electrical storage media such as RAM and ROM; thumb drive devices; cloud storage devices and hybrids of these categories such as magnetic/optical storage media.

In particular embodiments of the invention, the conformational variations in the crystal structures of the CRISPR-Cas9 system or of components of the CRISPR-Cas9 provide important and critical information about the flexibility or movement of protein structure regions relative to nucleotide (RNA or DNA) structure regions that may be important for CRISPR-Cas system function. The structural information provided for Cas9 (e.g. S. pyogenes Cas9) as the CRISPR enzyme in the present application may be used to further engineer and optimize the CRISPR-Cas system and this may be extrapolated to interrogate structure-function relationships in other CRISPR enzyme systems as well, e.g, other Type II CRISPR enzyme systems.

The invention comprehends optimized functional CRISPR-Cas enzyme systems, especially in combination with the present modified guides and also where the CRISPR enzyme is also associated with a functional domain. In particular, the CRISPR enzyme comprises one or more mutations that converts it to a DNA binding protein to which functional domains exhibiting a function of interest may be recruited or appended or inserted or attached. In certain embodiments, the CRISPR enzyme comprises one or more mutations which include but are not limited to D10A, E762A, H840A, N854A, N863A or D986A (based on the amino acid position numbering of a S. pyogenes Cas9) and/or the one or more mutations is in a RuvC1 or HNH domain of the CRISPR enzyme or is a mutation as otherwise as discussed herein. In some embodiments, the CRISPR enzyme has one or more mutations in a catalytic domain, wherein when transcribed, the tracr mate sequence hybridizes to the tracr sequence and the guide sequence directs sequence-specific binding of a CRISPR complex to the target sequence, and wherein the enzyme further comprises a functional domain. In some embodiments, a mutation at N580 according to SaCas9 protein is preferred. In particular, it is preferred in place of the mutation, in Sa Cas9, corresponding to H840 in Sp Cas9. In some embodiments, in Sa Cas9, mutation at D10 and N580 are preferred. In some embodiments, the N580 mutation may be N580A according to SaCas9 protein. It is believed, without being bound by theory, that this is a more predictable mutation for protein function than the H840A equivalent, which may change binding behaviour.

The structural information provided herein allows for interrogation of sgRNA (or chimeric RNA) interaction with the target DNA and the CRISPR enzyme (e.g. Cas9) permitting engineering or alteration of sgRNA structure to optimize functionality of the entire CRISPR-Cas system. For example, loops of the sgRNA may be extended, without colliding with the Cas9 protein by the insertion of adaptor proteins that can bind to RNA. These adaptor proteins can further recruit effector proteins or fusions which comprise one or more functional domains.

In some preferred embodiments, the functional domain is a transcriptional activation domain, preferably VP64. In some embodiments, the functional domain is a transcription repression domain, preferably KRAB. In some embodiments, the transcription repression domain is SID, or concatemers of SID (e.g. SID4X). In some embodiments, the functional domain is an epigenetic modifying domain, such that an epigenetic modifying enzyme is provided. In some embodiments, the functional domain is an activation domain, which may be the P65 activation domain.

Aspects of the invention encompass a non-naturally occurring or engineered composition that may comprise a guide RNA (sgRNA) comprising a guide sequence capable of hybridizing to a target sequence in a genomic locus of interest in a cell and a CRISPR enzyme that may comprise at least one or more nuclear localization sequences, wherein the CRISPR enzyme comprises two or more mutations, such that the enzyme has altered or diminished nuclease activity compared with the wild type enzyme, wherein at least one loop of the sgRNA is modified by the insertion of distinct RNA sequence(s) that bind to one or more adaptor proteins, and wherein the adaptor protein further recruits one or more heterologous functional domains. In an embodiment of the invention the CRISPR enzyme comprises two or more mutations in a residue selected from the group consisting of D10, E762, H840, N854, N863, or D986. In a further embodiment the CRISPR enzyme comprises two or more mutations selected from the group comprising D10A, E762A, H840A, N854A, N863A or D986A. As mentioned above, N580, especially N580A, according to SaCas9 protein is used, especially in Sa Cas9. In another embodiment, the functional domain is a transcriptional activation domain, e.g. VP64. In another embodiment, the functional domain is a transcriptional repressor domain, e.g. KRAB domain, SID domain or a SID4X domain. In embodiments of the invention, the one or more heterologous functional domains have one or more activities selected from the group consisting of methylase activity, demethylase activity, transcription activation activity, transcription repression activity, transcription release factor activity, histone modification activity, RNA cleavage activity and nucleic acid binding activity. In further embodiments of the invention the cell is a eukaryotic cell or a mammalian cell or a human cell. In further embodiments, the adaptor protein is selected from the group consisting of MS2, PP7, Qβ, F2, GA, fr, JP501, M12, R17, BZ13, JP34, JP500, KU1, M11, MX1, TW18, VK, SP, FI, ID2, NL95, TW19, AP205, ϕCb5, ϕCb8r, ϕCb12r, ϕCb23r, 7s, PRR1. In another embodiment, the at least one loop of the sgRNA is tetraloop and/or loop2. An aspect of the invention encompasses methods of modifying a genomic locus of interest to change gene expression in a cell by introducing into the cell any of the compositions described herein.

An aspect of the invention is that the above elements are comprised in a single composition or comprised in individual compositions. These compositions may advantageously be applied to a host to elicit a functional effect on the genomic level.

In general, the sgRNA are modified in a manner that provides specific binding sites (e.g. aptamers) for adapter proteins comprising one or more functional domains (e.g. via fusion protein) to bind to. The modified sgRNA are modified such that once the sgRNA forms a CRISPR complex (i.e. CRISPR enzyme binding to sgRNA and target) the adapter proteins bind and, the functional domain on the adapter protein is positioned in a spatial orientation which is advantageous for the attributed function to be effective. For example, if the functional domain is a transcription activator (e.g. VP64 or p65), the transcription activator is placed in a spatial orientation which allows it to affect the transcription of the target. Likewise, a transcription repressor will be advantageously positioned to affect the transcription of the target and a nuclease (e.g. Fok1) will be advantageously positioned to cleave or partially cleave the target.

The skilled person will understand that modifications to the sgRNA which allow for binding of the adapter+functional domain but not proper positioning of the adapter+functional domain (e.g. due to steric hindrance within the three dimensional structure of the CRISPR complex) are modifications which are not intended. The one or more modified sgRNA may be modified at the tetra loop, the stem loop 1, stem loop 2, or stem loop 3, as described herein, preferably at either the tetra loop or stem loop 2, and most preferably at both the tetra loop and stem loop 2.

As explained herein the functional domains may be, for example, one or more domains from the group consisting of methylase activity, demethylase activity, transcription activation activity, transcription repression activity, transcription release factor activity, histone modification activity, RNA cleavage activity, DNA cleavage activity, nucleic acid binding activity, and molecular switches (e.g. light inducible). In some cases it is advantageous that additionally at least one NLS is provided. In some instances, it is advantageous to position the NLS at the N terminus. When more than one functional domain is included, the functional domains may be the same or different.

The sgRNA may be designed to include multiple binding recognition sites (e.g. aptamers) specific to the same or different adapter protein. The sgRNA may be designed to bind to the promoter region −1000-+1 nucleic acids upstream of the transcription start site (i.e. TSS), preferably −200 nucleic acids. This positioning improves functional domains which affect gene activation (e.g. transcription activators) or gene inhibition (e.g. transcription repressors). The modified sgRNA may be one or more modified sgRNAs targeted to one or more target loci (e.g. at least 1 sgRNA, at least 2 sgRNA, at least 5 sgRNA, at least 10 sgRNA, at least 20 sgRNA, at least 30 sg RNA, at least 50 sgRNA) comprised in a composition.

Further, the CRISPR enzyme with diminished nuclease activity is most effective when the nuclease activity is inactivated (e.g. nuclease inactivation of at least 70%, at least 80%, at least 90%, at least 95%, at least 97%, or 100% as compared with the wild type enzyme; or to put in another way, a Cas9 enzyme or CRISPR enzyme having advantageously about 0% of the nuclease activity of the non-mutated or wild type Cas9 enzyme or CRISPR enzyme, or no more than about 3% or about 5% or about 10% of the nuclease activity of the non-mutated or wild type Cas9 enzyme or CRISPR enzyme). This is possible by introducing mutations into the RuvC and HNH nuclease domains of the SpCas9 and orthologs thereof. For example utilizing mutations in a residue selected from the group consisting of D10, E762, H840, N854, N863, or D986 and more preferably introducing one or more of the mutations selected from the group consisting of D10A, E762A, H840A, N854A, N863A or D986A. A preferable pair of mutations is D10A with H840A, more preferable is D10A with N863A of SpCas9 and orthologs thereof. In some embodiments, N580A according to SaCas9 protein, may be used, as discussed herein.

The inactivated CRISPR enzyme may have associated (e.g. via fusion protein) one or more functional domains, like for example as described herein for the modified sgRNA adaptor proteins, including for example, one or more domains from the group consisting of methylase activity, demethylase activity, transcription activation activity, transcription repression activity, transcription release factor activity, histone modification activity, RNA cleavage activity, DNA cleavage activity, nucleic acid binding activity, and molecular switches (e.g. light inducible). Preferred domains are Fok1, VP64, P65, HSF1, MyoD1. In the event that Fok1 is provided, it is advantageous that multiple Fok1 functional domains are provided to allow for a functional dimer and that sgRNAs are designed to provide proper spacing for functional use (Fok1) as specifically described in Tsai et al. Nature Biotechnology, Vol. 32, Number 6, June 2014). The adaptor protein may utilize known linkers to attach such functional domains. In some cases it is advantageous that additionally at least one NLS is provided. In some instances, it is advantageous to position the NLS at the N terminus. When more than one functional domain is included, the functional domains may be the same or different.

In general, the positioning of the one or more functional domain on the inactivated CRISPR enzyme is one which allows for correct spatial orientation for the functional domain to affect the target with the attributed functional effect. For example, if the functional domain is a transcription activator (e.g. VP64 or p65), the transcription activator is placed in a spatial orientation which allows it to affect the transcription of the target. Likewise, a transcription repressor will be advantageously positioned to affect the transcription of the target, and a nuclease (e.g. Fok1) will be advantageously positioned to cleave or partially cleave the target. This may include positions other than the N-/C-terminus of the CRISPR enzyme.

Due to crystal structure experiments, the Applicant has identified that positioning the functional domain in the Rec domain, the Rec2 domain, the HNH domain, or the PI domain of the SpCas9 protein or any ortholog corresponding to these domains is advantageous. Positioning of the functional domains to the Rec domain or the Rec2 domain, of the SpCas9 protein or any ortholog corresponding to these domains, in some instances may be preferred. Positioning of the functional domains to the Rec domain at position 553, Rec domain at 575, the Rec2 domain at any position of 175-306 or replacement thereof, the HNH domain at any position of 715-901 or replacement thereof, or the PI domain at position 1153 of the SpCas9 protein or any ortholog corresponding to these domains, in some instances may be preferred. Fok1 functional domain may be attached at the N terminus. When more than one functional domain is included, the functional domains may be the same or different.

The adaptor protein may be any number of proteins that binds to an aptamer or recognition site introduced into the modified sgRNA and which allows proper positioning of one or more functional domains, once the sgRNA has been incorporated into the CRISPR complex, to affect the target with the attributed function. As explained in detail in this application such may be coat proteins, preferably bacteriophage coat proteins. The functional domains associated with such adaptor proteins (e.g. in the form of fusion protein) may include, for example, one or more domains from the group consisting of methylase activity, demethylase activity, transcription activation activity, transcription repression activity, transcription release factor activity, histone modification activity, RNA cleavage activity, DNA cleavage activity, nucleic acid binding activity, and molecular switches (e.g. light inducible). Preferred domains are Fok1, VP64, P65, HSF1, MyoD1. In the event that the functional domain is a transcription activator or transcription repressor it is advantageous that additionally at least an NLS is provided and preferably at the N terminus. When more than one functional domain is included, the functional domains may be the same or different. The adaptor protein may utilize known linkers to attach such functional domains.

Thus, the modified sgRNA, the inactivated CRISPR enzyme (with or without functional domains), and the binding protein with one or more functional domains, may each individually be comprised in a composition and administered to a host individually or collectively. Alternatively, these components may be provided in a single composition for administration to a host. Administration to a host may be performed via viral vectors known to the skilled person or described herein for delivery to a host (e.g. lentiviral vector, adenoviral vector, AAV vector). As explained herein, use of different selection markers (e.g. for lentiviral sgRNA selection) and concentration of sgRNA (e.g. dependent on whether multiple sgRNAs are used) may be advantageous for eliciting an improved effect.

On the basis of this concept, several variations are appropriate to elicit a genomic locus event, including DNA cleavage, gene activation, or gene deactivation. Using the provided compositions, the person skilled in the art can advantageously and specifically target single or multiple loci with the same or different functional domains to elicit one or more genomic locus events. The compositions may be applied in a wide variety of methods for screening in libraries in cells and functional modeling in vivo (e.g. gene activation of lincRNA and identification of function; gain-of-function modeling; loss-of-function modeling; the use the compositions of the invention to establish cell lines and transgenic animals for optimization and screening purposes).

The current invention comprehends the use of the compositions of the current invention to establish and utilize conditional or inducible CRISPR transgenic cell/animals. (See, e.g., Platt et al., Cell (2014), dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2014.09.014, or PCT patent publications cited herein, such as WO 2014/093622 (PCT/US2013/074667), which are not believed prior to the present invention or application). For example, the target cell comprises CRISPR enzyme (e.g. Cas9) conditionally or inducibly (e.g. in the form of Cre dependent constructs) and/or the adapter protein conditionally or inducibly and, on expression of a vector introduced into the target cell, the vector expresses that which induces or gives rise to the condition of CRISPR enzyme (e.g. Cas9) expression and/or adaptor expression in the target cell. By applying the teaching and compositions of the current invention with the known method of creating a CRISPR complex, inducible genomic events affected by functional domains are also an aspect of the current invention. One more example of this is the creation of a CRISPR knock-in/conditional transgenic animal (e.g. mouse comprising e.g. a Lox-Stop-polyA-Lox(LSL) cassette) and subsequent delivery of one or more compositions providing one or more modified sgRNA (e.g. −200 nucleotides to TSS of a target gene of interest for gene activation purposes) as described herein (e.g. modified sgRNA with one or more aptamers recognized by coat proteins, e.g. MS2), one or more adapter proteins as described herein (MS2 binding protein linked to one or more VP64) and means for inducing the conditional animal (e.g. Cre recombinase for rendering Cas9 expression inducible). Alternatively, the adaptor protein may be provided as a conditional or inducible element with a conditional or inducible CRISPR enzyme to provide an effective model for screening purposes, which advantageously only requires minimal design and administration of specific sgRNAs for a broad number of applications.

In some embodiments, the CRISPR enzyme is a Cas9 ortholog of a genus belonging to the group consisting of Corynebacter, Sutterella, Legionella, Treponema, Filifactor, Eubacterium, Streptococcus, Lactobacillus, Mycoplasma, Bacteroides, Flaviivola, Flavobacterium, Sphaerochaeta, Azospirillum, Gluconacetobacter, Neisseria, Roseburia, Parvibaculum, Staphylococcus, Nitratifractor, Mycoplasma and Campylobacter, wherein the Cas comprises a helical domain 2 truncation.

In an aspect the invention provides a composition, method or use as herein discussed wherein the helical domain 2 truncation is substituted with one or more sets of flexible glycine-serine (GlyGlyGlySer) (SEQ ID NO: 1) or rigid alpha-helical linkers (Ala(GluAlaAlaAlaLys)Ala) (SEQ ID NO: 2) in groups of 3, 6, 9, or 12 (SEQ ID NOS 3-6, respectively) repeats to replace helical domain 2 for potential structural stabilization and/or aiding of retaining Cas9:sgRNA specificity.

In an aspect the invention provides a composition, method or use as herein discussed wherein the CRISPR enzyme is a Cas such as an SpCas9 or SaCas9.

In an aspect the invention provides a non-naturally occurring CRISPR enzyme wherein the HD2 domain has been truncated. The CRISPR enzyme can be a Cas9, e.g., an Sp Cas9 or an Sa Cas9.

In an aspect the invention provides a CRISPR enzyme wherein the truncation is replacement of the HD2 domain, e.g., wherein the truncation is replacement of the HD2 domain with a linker, such as a flexible linker; for instance, a GlySer linker.

In an aspect the invention provides a chimeric 3-component CRISPR enzyme comprising N′ and C′ terminal components from a first CRISPR enzyme, and an internal component from a second CRISPR enzyme, the second CRISPR enzyme being an ortholog of the first CRISPR enzyme; for instance, wherein the first and second CRISPR enzymes each comprise a Cas9, such as an Sp Cas9 or an Sa Cas9 or an St Cas9, e.g., St3 Cas9. In some aspects the CRISPR enzyme as discussed herein can comprise an internal component from the first CRISPR enzyme replaced by an internal component from the second CRISPR enzyme, said internal components being the same or different. In an aspect of the invention the second CRISPR enzyme is an Sa CRISPR enzyme or an St CRISPR enzyme or an St3 CRISPR enzyme. The invention envisions a composition, method, system, or use of as herein discussed wherein the CRISPR enzyme is chimeric or truncated as herein discussed.

Accordingly, it is an object of the invention not to encompass within the invention any previously known product, process of making the product, or method of using the product such that Applicants reserve the right and hereby disclose a disclaimer of any previously known product, process, or method. It is further noted that the invention does not intend to encompass within the scope of the invention any product, process, or making of the product or method of using the product, which does not meet the written description and enablement requirements of the USPTO (35 U.S.C. § 112, first paragraph) or the EPO (Article 83 of the EPC), such that Applicants reserve the right and hereby disclose a disclaimer of any previously described product, process of making the product, or method of using the product.

It is noted that in this disclosure and particularly in the claims and/or paragraphs, terms such as “comprises”, “comprised”, “comprising” and the like can have the meaning attributed to it in U.S. Patent law; e.g., they can mean “includes”, “included”, “including”, and the like; and that terms such as “consisting essentially of” and “consists essentially of” have the meaning ascribed to them in U.S. Patent law, e.g., they allow for elements not explicitly recited, but exclude elements that are found in the prior art or that affect a basic or novel characteristic of the invention. Nothing herein is to be construed as a promise.

These and other embodiments are disclosed or are obvious from and encompassed by, the following Detailed Description.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The novel features of the invention are set forth with particularity in the appended claims. A better understanding of the features and advantages of the present invention will be obtained by reference to the following detailed description that sets forth illustrative embodiments, in which the principles of the invention are utilized, and the accompanying drawings of which:

FIG. 1 shows a schematic model of the CRISPR system. The Cas9 nuclease from Streptococcus pyogenes (yellow) is targeted to genomic DNA by a synthetic guide RNA (sgRNA) consisting of a 20-nt guide sequence (blue) and a scaffold (red). The guide sequence base-pairs with the DNA target (blue), directly upstream of a requisite 5′-NGG protospacer adjacent motif (PAM; magenta), and Cas9 mediates a double-stranded break (DSB) ˜3 bp upstream of the PAM (red triangle).

FIG. 2A-F shows an exemplary CRISPR system, a possible mechanism of action, an example adaptation for expression in eukaryotic cells, and results of tests assessing nuclear localization and CRISPR activity. FIG. 2A illustrates a schematic showing the CRISPR locus 1 from Streptococcus pyogenes SF370 and a proposed mechanism of CRISPR-mediated DNA cleavage by this system. FIG. 2B illustrates engineering of S. pyogenes Cas9 (SpCas9) and RNase III (SpRNase III) with nuclear localization signals (NLSs) to enable import into the mammalian nucleus. FIG. 2C illustrates mammalian expression of SpCas9 and SpRNase III driven by the constitutive EF1a promoter and tracrRNA and pre-crRNA array (DR-Spacer-DR) driven by the RNA Pol3 promoter U6 to promote precise transcription initiation and termination. FIG. 2D illustrates surveyor nuclease assay for SpCas9-mediated minor insertions and deletions. FIG. 2E illustrates a schematic representation of base pairing between target locus and EMX1-targeting crRNA, as well as an example chromatogram showing a micro deletion adjacent to the SpCas9 cleavage site. FIG. 2F illustrates mutated alleles identified from sequencing analysis of 43 clonal amplicons showing a variety of micro insertions and deletions. FIG. 2C discloses SEQ ID NOS 225 and 226, respectively in order of appearance. FIG. 2E discloses SEQ ID NOS 227-229, respectively, in order of appearance. FIG. 2F discloses SEQ ID NOS 230-234, respectively, in order of appearance.

FIG. 3A-D shows results of an evaluation of SpCas9 specificity for an example target. FIG. 3A shows a series of EMX1-targeting chimeric crRNAs with single point mutations. FIG. 3B illustrates results of a Surveyor nuclease assay comparing the cleavage efficiency of Cas9 when paired with different mutant chimeric RNAs. FIG. 3C provides a schematic showing the design of TALENs targeting EMX1, and FIG. 3D shows a Surveyor gel comparing the efficiency of TALEN and Cas9 (n=3). FIG. 3A discloses SEQ ID NOS 235, 228 and 236-246, respectively, in order of appearance. FIG. 3C discloses SEQ ID NO: 235.

FIG. 4A-G show an exemplary vector system and results for its use in directing homologous recombination in eukaryotic cells. FIG. 4A illustrates an aspartate-to-alanine substitution (D10A) in the RuvC I catalytic domain of SpCas9 was engineered to convert the nuclease into a nickase. FIG. 4B illustrates co-expression of EMX1-targeting chimeric crRNA with SpCas9 produced indels in the target site, whereas co-expression with SpCas9n did not (n=3). FIG. 4C provides a schematic illustration of the HR strategy, with relative locations of recombination points and primer annealing sequences (arrows). FIG. 4D shows SpCas9 and SpCas9n indeed catalyzed integration of the HR template into the EMX1 locus, whereas PCR amplification of the target region followed by restriction digest with HindIII revealed cleavage products corresponding to expected fragment sizes (arrows in restriction fragment length polymorphism gel analysis), with SpCas9 and SpCas9n mediating similar levels of HR efficiencies. FIG. 4E shows verification of HR using Sanger sequencing of genomic amplicons. FIG. 4F shows a schematic design of the crRNA array and a Surveyor blot showing efficient mediation of cleavage. FIG. 4G shows targeted deletion of larger genomic regions through concurrent DSBs using spacers against two targets within EMX1 spaced by 119 bp was also tested, and a 1.6% deletion efficacy. FIG. 4E discloses SEQ ID NO: 247. FIG. 4F discloses SEQ ID NOS 248 and 249, respectively, in order of appearance. FIG. 4G discloses SEQ ID NOS 250-254, respectively, in order of appearance.

FIG. 5 provides a table of protospacer sequences (SEQ ID NOS 44, 43, 42, 255-260, 46, 45 and 261-265, respectively, in order of appearance) and summarizes modification efficiency results for protospacer targets designed based on exemplary S. pyogenes and S. thermophilus CRISPR systems with corresponding PAMs against loci in human and mouse genomes. Cells were transfected with Cas9 and either pre-crRNA/tracrRNA or chimeric RNA, and analyzed 72 hours after transfection. Percent indels are calculated based on Surveyor assay results from indicated cell lines (N=3 for all protospacer targets, errors are S.E.M., N.D. indicates not detectable using the Surveyor assay, and N.T. indicates not tested in this study).

FIG. 6A-C shows a comparison of different tracrRNA transcripts for Cas9-mediated gene targeting. FIG. 6A shows exemplary expression constructs for expression tracrRNA in mammalian cells. FIG. 6B shows functionality of the expression constructs as determined by results of a Surveyor assay. FIG. 6C shows results of a Northern blot analysis of total RNA extracted from 293FT cells transfected with U6 expression constructs carrying long or short tracrRNA, as well as SpCas9 and DR-EMX1(1)-DR. FIG. 6A discloses SEQ ID NOS 266 and 267, respectively, in order of appearance.

FIG. 7 shows a schematic of a surveyor nuclease assay for detection of double strand break-induced micro-insertions and -deletions.

FIG. 8A-B shows exemplary bicistronic expression vectors for expression of CRISPR system elements in eukaryotic cells. FIG. 8A discloses SEQ ID NOS 268-270, respectively, in order of appearance. FIG. 8B discloses SEQ ID NOS 271, 380 and 381, respectively, in order of appearance.

FIG. 9A-C shows histograms of distances between adjacent S. pyogenes SF370 locus 1 PAM (NGG) (FIG. 9A) and S. thermophilus LMD9 locus 2 PAM (NNAGAAW) (FIG. 9B) in the human genome; and distances for each PAM by chromosome (Chr) (FIG. 9C).

FIG. 10A-D shows an exemplary CRISPR system, an example adaptation for expression in eukaryotic cells, and results of tests assessing CRISPR activity. FIG. 10A provides a Schematic illustration of CRISPR 1 from S. thermophilus LMD-9. FIG. 10B illustrates the design of an expression system for the S. thermophilus CRISPR system. FIG. 10C provides a schematic showing guide sequences targeting the human EMX1 locus. FIG. 10D shows the results of hStCas9-mediated cleavage in the target locus using the Surveyor assay. FIG. 10B discloses SEQ ID NOS 272 and 273, respectively, in order of appearance. FIG. 10C discloses SEQ ID NO: 274.

FIG. 11A-C shows exemplary manipulations of a CRISPR system for targeting of genomic loci in mammalian cells. FIG. 11A provides a schematic of the human EMX1 locus showing the location of five protospacers, indicated by the underlined sequences. FIG. 11B provides a schematic of the pre-crRNA/trcrRNA complex showing hybridization between the direct repeat region of the pre-crRNA and tracrRNA (top), and a schematic of a chimeric RNA design comprising a 20 bp guide sequence, and tracr mate and tracr sequences consisting of partial direct repeat and tracrRNA sequences hybridized in a hairpin structure (bottom). FIG. 11C shows results of a Surveyor assay comparing the efficacy of Cas9-mediated cleavage at five protospacers in the human EMX1 locus. FIG. 11A discloses SEQ ID NO: 275. FIG. 11B discloses SEQ ID NOS 276-278, respectively, in order of appearance.

FIG. 12A-B shows the results of a Northern blot analysis of crRNA processing in mammalian cells. FIG. 12A illustrates a schematic showing the expression vector for a single spacer flanked by two direct repeats (DR-EMX1(1)-DR). FIG. 12B shows a Northern blot analysis of total RNA extracted from 293FT cells transfected with U6 expression constructs carrying DR-EMX1(1)-DR. FIG. 12A discloses SEQ ID NO: 279.

FIG. 13A-B shows an exemplary selection of protospacers in the human PVALB (SEQ ID NO: 280) and mouse Th loci (SEQ ID NO: 281).

FIG. 14 shows example protospacer and corresponding PAM sequence targets of the S. thermophilus CRISPR system in the human EMX1 locus. FIG. 14 discloses SEQ ID NO: 274.

FIG. 15 provides a table of sequences (SEQ ID NOS 282-289, 382-383, and 290-291, respectively, in order of appearance) for primers and probes used for Surveyor, RFLP, genomic sequencing, and Northern blot assays.

FIG. 16A-C shows exemplary manipulation of a CRISPR system with chimeric RNAs and results of SURVEYOR assays for system activity in eukaryotic cells. FIG. 16A illustrates a schematic of a bicistronic expression vector for chimeric RNA and Cas9. FIGS. 16B and 16C show results of SURVEYOR assays for Cas9-mediated indels at the human EMX1 and PVALB loci, respectively. FIG. 16A discloses SEQ ID NO: 292.

FIG. 17A-B shows a graphical representation of the results of SURVEYOR assays for CRISPR system activity in eukaryotic cells. FIGS. 17A and 16B show histograms of quantification of results corresponding to FIGS. 16B and 16C, respectively.

FIG. 18 shows an exemplary visualization of some S. pyogenes Cas9 target sites in the human genome using the UCSC genome browser. FIG. 18 discloses SEQ ID NOS 293-371, respectively, in order of appearance.

FIG. 19A-D shows a circular depiction of the phylogenetic analysis revealing five families of Cas9s, including three groups of large Cas9s (˜1400 amino acids) and two of small Cas9s (˜1100 amino acids).

FIG. 20A-F shows the linear depiction of the phylogenetic analysis revealing five families of Cas9s, including three groups of large Cas9s (˜1400 amino acids) and two of small Cas9s (˜1100 amino acids).

FIG. 21A-D shows genome editing via homologous recombination. FIG. 21A: Schematic of SpCas9 nickase, with D10A mutation in the RuvC I catalytic domain. FIG. 21B: Schematic representing homologous recombination (HR) at the human EMX1 locus using either sense or antisense single stranded oligonucleotides as repair templates. Red arrow above indicates sgRNA cleavage site; PCR primers for genotyping (Tables J and K) are indicated as arrows in right panel. FIG. 21C: Sequence of region modified by HR. FIG. 21D: SURVEYOR assay for wildtype (wt) and nickase (D10A) SpCas9-mediated indels at the EMX1 target 1 locus (n=3). Arrows indicate positions of expected fragment sizes. FIG. 21C discloses SEQ ID NOS 372-374, 372, 375, and 374, respectively, in order of appearance.

FIG. 22A-B shows single vector designs for SpCas9. FIG. 22A discloses SEQ ID NOS 376-378, respectively, in order of appearance. FIG. 22B discloses SEQ ID NO: 379.

FIGS. 23A-M provide: a diagram showing the topology of the Cas9 protein. Provided is a ribbon representation and various views of the CRISPR-cas complex crystal structure (A-I), chimeric RNA architecture from the crystal structure (J-K), an interaction schematic from the crystal structure (L) and a topology schematic from the crystal structure (M). FIG. 23J discloses SEQ ID NO: 384. FIG. 23L discloses SEQ ID NOS 385-386.

FIGS. 24A-C show, from the crystal structure, a schematic of showing catalytic domains of SpCas9, sites of mutagenesis for new nickases (A), a schematic showing locations of sgRNAs for testing double nicking (B), and results of a Surveyor gel test results showing 1 HNH mutant N854A that retains nickase activity, and 1 HNH mutant that shows nickase activity (N863A), and 2 RuvCIII mutants that show nickase activity (H983A, D986A) (C).

FIGS. 25A-B show Surveyor gel test results of SpCas9 truncation mutants from the crystal structure that retain cleavage activity (A) and a table showing the amino acid truncations and flexible (GGGS) (SEQ ID NO: 1) or rigid (A(EAAAK)) (SEQ ID NO: 7) linker substitutions of the lanes of the gels of FIG. 25A (B). FIG. 25B discloses linker sequences as SEQ ID NOS: 3-4, 10, 12, 9-11 and 3-6, respectively, in order of appearance.

FIGS. 26A-B show SpCas9 sgRNAs (SEQ ID NOS 387-425, respectively, in order of appearance) from the crystal structure including those mutated to investigate contribution to activity of specific bases or groups to basses.

FIGS. 27A-C show truncation and creation of chimeric (S. pyogenes) Cas9s based on the herein crystal structure, including mutants for mapping essential functional domains (A), chimeras that contain regions from S. thermophilus Cas9 (B), and designs for chemically inducible dimerization of SpCas9 (C).

FIG. 28 shows a picture of Cas9 crystals (0.2 mm).

FIG. 29 shows a structural figure of showing Cas9 in a surface representation; red, sgRNA; cyan, the guide region of sgRNA; gold, target DNA.

FIG. 30A-D shows the overall structure. (A) Domain organization of S. pyogenes Cas9, and schematic of the sgRNA:target DNA complex. (B) Ribbon representation of the Cas9-sgRNA-DNA complex. Disordered linkers are shown as red dotted lines. (C) Surface representation of the Cas9-sgRNA-DNA complex. The active sites of the RuvC (D10A) and HNH (H840A) domains are indicated by dashed yellow circles. (D) Electrostatic surface potential of the Cas9-sgRNA-DNA complex. The HNH domain is omitted for clarity. Molecular graphic images were prepared using CueMol (see website at cuemol.org). Also refer to FIGS. 37 and 38 .

FIG. 31A-E shows the REC lobe and PI domain. (A) Structure of the REC lobe. The REC2 domain and Bridge helix are colored dark gray and green, respectively. The REC1 domain is colored gray, with the repeat-interacting and anti-repeat-interacting regions colored pale blue and pink, respectively. The bound sgRNA:DNA is shown as semi-transparent ribbon representation. (B) Schematics indicating positions of SpCas9 truncations in the REC1 and REC2 domains. Bars on the right show indel mutations generated by the truncation mutants, measured by SURVEYOR assay (n=3, error bars show mean S.E.M., N.D., not detectable). (C) Western blot showing expression of truncation mutants in HEK 293FT cells. (D) Structure of the PI domain. The bound sgRNA is shown as semi-transparent ribbon representation. (E) Schematics showing wild-type SpCas9 and St3Cas9, chimeric Cas9, as well as SpCas9 PI domain truncation constructs. Cas9s are assayed for indel generation at target sites upstream of either NGG (left bar graph) or NGGNG (right bar graph) PAMs (n=3, error bars show mean±S.E.M., N.D., not detectable). See also FIGS. 39-41 . FIG. 31E discloses SEQ ID NOS 426 and 145, respectively, in order of appearance.

FIG. 32A-F shows the NUC lobe. Helices are shown as tubes and beta sheets are shown as arrows. (A) Structure of the RuvC domain. The core structure of the RNase H fold core is highlighted in cyan. The active-site residues are shown as stick models. (B) Structure of the T. thermophilus RuvC dimer in complex with a Holliday junction (PDB ID 4LD0). The two protomers are colored cyan and gray, respectively. (C) Sequence (top) (SEQ ID NO: 427) illustrates Cas9 nicking targets on opposite strands of DNA. Targets 1 and 2 are offset by a distance of 4-bp in between. Heatmap (bottom) shows the ability of each catalytic mutant to induce double- (with either sgRNA 1 or 2) or single-stranded breaks (only with both sgRNA together). Gray boxes: not assayed. (D) Indel formation by Cas9 nickases depends on off-set distance between sgRNA pairs (right panel). Off-set distance is defined as the number of base pairs between the PAM-distal (5′) ends of the guide sequence of a given sgRNA pair (n=3, error bars show mean S.E.M., N.D., not detectable). (E) Structure of the HNH domain. The core structure of the ββα-metal fold is highlighted in magenta. The active-site residues are shown as stick models. (F) Structure of the T4 Endo VII dimer in complex with a Holliday junction (PDB ID 2QNC). The two protomers are colored pink and gray, respectively, with the ββα-metal fold core highlighted in magenta. The bound Mg²⁺ ion is shown as an orange sphere.

FIG. 33A-D shows sgRNA and its target DNA. (A) Schematic of the sgRNA:DNA complex. The guide and repeat regions of the crRNA sequence are colored skyblue and blue, respectively. The tracrRNA sequence is colored red, with the linker region colored violet. The target DNA and tetraloop are colored yellow and black, respectively. The numbering of the 3′ tails of tracrRNA is shown on red background. Watson-Crick and non-Watson-Crick base pairs are indicated by black and gray lines, respectively. Disordered nucleotides are boxed by dashed lines. (B) Structure of the sgRNA:DNA complex. (C) Structure of the repeat:anti-repeat duplex and three-way junction. Key interactions are shown as gray dashed lines. (D) Effect of sgRNA mutations on ability to induce indels. Base changes from the +83 sgRNA scaffold are shown at respective positions, with dashes indicating unaltered bases (n=3, error bars show mean±S.E.M., p values based on unpaired Student's t-test, N.D., not detectable). See also FIG. 42 . FIG. 33A discloses SEQ ID NO: 428. FIG. 33D discloses SEQ ID NOS 429-442, respectively, in order of appearance.

FIG. 34A-K shows Recognition of the sgRNA:DNA. (A) Schematic of sgRNA:DNA recognition by Cas9. Residues that interact with the sgRNA:DNA via their main chain are shown in parentheses. (B and C-K) Recognition of the guide (B), guide:DNA duplex (D), repeat (E), anti-repeat (F), three-way junction (G), stem loop 1 (H), linker (I), stem loop 2 (J) and stem loop 3 (K). Hydrogen bonds and salt bridges are shown as dashed lines. (C) Effect of Cas9 (top) and sgRNA (bottom) mutations on ability to induce indels (n=3, error bars show mean S.E.M., p values based on unpaired Student's t-test. N.D., not detectable). FIG. 34A discloses SEQ ID NOS 385 and 443.

FIG. 35A-D shows Structural flexibility of the complex. (A) Structural comparison of Mol A and Mol B. In Mol A (left), disordered linker between the RuvC and HNH domain is indicated by a dotted line. In Mol B (right), the disordered HNH domain is shown as a dashed circle. The flexible connecting segment (a40 and a41) in the RuvC domain is highlighted in orange. (B) Superimposition of the Cas9 proteins in Mol A and Mol B. The two complexes are superimposed based on the core R-sheet of their RuvC domains. The HNH domain and bound sgRNA:DNA are omitted for clarity. (C) Superimposition of the bound sgRNA:DNA in Mol A and Mol B. After superimposition of the two complexes as in (B), the Cas9 proteins are omitted to show the sgRNA:DNA. (D) Molecular surface of Cas9. The HNH domain and bound sgRNA:DNA complex are omitted for clarity. Note that there is no direct contact between the REC and NUC lobes, expect for the interactions between the α2-α3 loop and β17-β18 loop.

FIG. 36 shows a Model of RNA-guided DNA cleavage by Cas9.

FIG. 37 shows Electron density map. The 2mFo-DFc electron density map around the three-way junction is shown as a gray mesh (contoured at 2.56).

FIG. 38A-C shows Di-cysteine mutant (C80L/C574E) is functional in HEK 293FT cells. (A) Schematic illustrating positions of cysteine mutations (C80L and C574E) in Cas9. (B) Sequence of the target site (SEQ ID NO: 444) used to test the function of the C80L/C574E mutant of Cas9. (C) SURVEYOR nuclease assay showing indels generated by either the wild-type or C80L/C574E mutant (n=3).

FIG. 39 shows a schematic drawing of the secondary structural elements of Cas9.

FIG. 40A-B shows the sequence alignment of Cas9 orthologs in families II-A and II-C(SEQ ID NOS 445-450, respectively in order of appearance). The catalytic residues are shown in red triangles. Critical arginine residues on Bridge helix are shown in green triangles. The secondary structure of S. pyogenes Cas9 is shown above the sequences. The figure was prepared using TCoffee (Notredame et al., 2000) and ESPript (Gouet et al., 1999). Sp, S. pyogenes; Sm, Streptococcus mutans; St3, Streptococcus thermophilus CRISPR-3; Stl, Streptococcus thermophilus CRISPR-1; Cj, Campylobacter jejuni; Mm; Neisseria meningiditis.

FIG. 41 shows the sequence alignment of Cas9 orthologs in families II-A, II—B and II-C. 35 Cas9 orthologs from families IIA, IIB and IIC are aligned (BLOSUM62) and clustered (Jukes-Cantor model Neighbor-Joining method, with S. pyogenes Cas9 as outgroup). Bars on top show conservation by amino acid. In each line, black bars show residues with at least 75% consensus, and gray bars non-conserved residues.

FIG. 42 shows the comparison of the sgRNA:DNA heteroduplex with a canonical A-form RNA duplex. The sgRNA:DNA heteroduplex are superimposed on an A-form RNA duplex based on their phosphorus atoms. The A-form RNA duplex is colored dark gray. Nucleotides 51-97 of the sgRNA are omitted for clarity.

FIG. 43 shows DNA construct design of the previously studied dCas9 activator design. An activation domain is fused to the C-term of a catalytically inactive dCas via a linker. An NLS is incorporated between Cas9 and VP64.

FIG. 44 shows illustration of insertions of MS2 loops in at the end of the Tetraloop and loop 2 of the sgRNA. An MS2-VP64 fusion protein is recruited to these two loops. Together with dCas9 this leads to a recruitment of the VP64 activation domain to the target DNA of the target locus. Inserted MS2 RNA stem loops are colored dark green.

FIG. 45 shows a graphical representation of the upregulation of Neurog2 expression in Neuro2A cells. 4 different guide RNAs including an Ms2 loop inserted in either the tetraloop or loop 2, both loops or none were tested in combination with dCas9 and MS2-vp64, dCas9-vp64 and MS2-vp64 or dCas9-vp64 alone. TL:MS2, MS2 loop insertion into the sgRNA tetraloop; L2: MS2, MS2 loop insertion into loop 2 of the sgRNA. Colors indicate which protein-coding constructs were co-transfected with the corresponding guide.

FIG. 46 shows Human ASCL1 upregulation with Cas9-MS2 activators.

FIG. 47 shows Human MYOD1 upregulation with Cas9-MS2 activators.

FIG. 48 shows an illustration of orthogonal PP7/MS2 gene targeting. In the schematic, sgRNA targeting different loci are modified with distinct RNA loops in order to recruit MS2-VP64 or PP7-SID4X, which activate and repress their target loci, respectively.

FIG. 49 shows the positions of transcriptional domain replacements and insertions in Cas9. The HNH domain is colored pink. The curved arrow indicates the movement of the HNH domain relative to the DNA (yellow) RNA (blue) duplex due to a conformational change. The A in a red circle indicates the first loop (AA G533) used for insertion of a transcriptional effector domain and its position relative to the target DNA. The third loop (K1153) for insertion of a transcriptional effector domain is indicated by a C on a red circle.

FIG. 50 shows effects of sgRNA modifications on ASCL1 activation. 3′ MS2 and modified MS2 1.0 sgRNA architectures were tested for their ability to activate ASCL1.

FIG. 51 shows effects of sgRNA modifications MYOD1 activation. 3′ MS2 and modified MS2 1.0 sgRNA architectures were tested for their ability to activate ASCL1.

FIG. 52 shows effects of dCas9 NLS and N863A modifications on ASCL1 activation.

FIG. 53 shows effects of dCas9 NLS and N863A modifications on MYOD1 activation.

FIG. 54 shows a comparison of different NLS and point mutation dCas-VP64 architectures in combination with MS2 fused to individual or combined activation domains. SV40: SV40 NLS; a-imp: a-importin NLS; DV: dCas-SV40 NLS-VP64; Mm: MS2-ASCL1TAD; MP: MS2-p65; MPH: MS2-p65-HSF1; MPm: MS2-p65-ASCL1TAD. All dCas9 proteins contain D10A mutation and H840A (unless indicated otherwise).

FIG. 55 shows a comparison of different NLS and point mutation dCas-VP64 architectures in combination with MS2 fused to individual or combined activation domains. SV40: SV40 NLS; a-imp: a-importin NLS; DV: dCas-SV40 NLS-VP64; Mm: MS2-MyodTAD; MP: MS2-p65; MPH: MS2-p65-HSF1; MPm: MS2-p65-MyodTAD. All dCas9 proteins contain D10A mutation and H840A (unless indicated otherwise).

FIG. 56 shows MS2 double activator fusion proteins for ASCL1 activation. Comparisons of MS2-VP64 and MS2-p65 with and without an additional HSF1 activation domain fusion. The greatest relative improvement occurred for dCas9 without its own activation domain. This improvement is particularly important for the future use of the system in multimodal transcriptional modulation, wherein transcriptional modulation occurs only by way of the sgRNA and its aptamerized proteins, not the dCas9, allowing distinct guide sequences to target distinct functionalities.

FIG. 57 shows MS2 double activator fusion proteins for MYOD1 activation.

FIG. 58 shows fold expression levels activated by single sgRNA guide sequences for 12 difficult to modulate genes. All activation shown with MS2-p65-HSF1/SV40-dCas9-VP64 system. Guide locations are plotted relative to the TSS of each target.

FIG. 59 shows a plot of the fold expression of the best guide sequence against the deltaCt value from qPCR for that gene in control samples for the difficult targets listed above.

FIG. 60 shows multiplexed activation of ten genes.

FIG. 61 shows multiplexed activation of target genes.

FIG. 62 shows targeting of combinations of 2, 4, 6, 8 or 10 genes simultaneously using the optimal single guide as previously determined. All experiments use NLS-dCAS(D10,H840A)-NLS-VP64 in combination with MS2-NLS-P65-HSF1.

FIG. 63 shows multiplexed activation groups of target genes.

FIG. 64A-F shows structure-guided design and optimization of an RNA-guided transcription activation complex. a, The crystal structure of the Cas9-sgRNA-target DNA tertiary complex (PDB ID: 4008) reveals the occlusion of N- and C-terminal fusion sites from the target DNA. The sgRNA tetraloop and stem loop 2 largely do not contact Cas9 amino acid residues in this conformation and can be modified without altering existing Cas9-sgRNA interactions. b, Diagram of three-component transcriptional activation system (SAM): sgRNA2.0, the MS2-p65-HSF1 transcription transactivator, and the dCas9-VP64 fusion protein. MS2 stem-loop additions on the sgRNA are highlighted in red. c, Design and optimization of sgRNA scaffolds for optimal recruitment of MS2-VP64 transactivators. d, MS2 stem-loop placement within the sgRNA significantly affects transcription activation efficiency. e, Combinations of different activation domains act in synergy to further enhance the level of transcription activation. f, Addition of the HSF1 transactivation domain to MS2-p65 further increases the efficiency of transcription activation. All values are mean+−SEM with n=3. * indicate p<0.05 based on Student's t-test.

FIG. 65A-D shows characterization of SAM-mediated gene activation and selection rules for efficient sgRNAs. a, Fold activation of 12 different genes plotted against the location of the sgRNA. Distances are measured in bp relative to the TSS at +1. sgRNA1.0 with dCas9-VP64 (grey), sgRNA2.0 with dCas9-VP64 and MS2-p65-HSF1 (blue). Arrows indicate sgRNA target sites with poor transcription activation. All values are mean±SEM with n=3. b, Comparison of activation efficiency achieved using dCas9-VP64 and a single sgRNA1.0 for the target gene; dCas9-VP64, a single sgRNA2.0 for the same target site as the single sgRNA1.0, and MS2-p65-HSF1; and dCas9-VP64 and a mixture of 8 sgRNAs targeting the same gene. c, Efficiency of target gene transcription activation as a function of their baseline expression levels. Genes with a higher basal level of transcription exhibit a lower fold up-regulation. For each target gene, the baseline expression level is measured using qPCR in the GFP-transfected control cells and expressed as level relative to GAPDH (fold lower expression compared to GAPDH on x-axis). d, Correlation of gene activation efficiency with sgRNA targeting position in the proximal promoter region expressed as distance to the TSS. Activation efficiencies of each sgRNA for the same target gene is normalized against the highest-activating sgRNA. Proximity to the TSS is positively correlated with target up-regulation. Blue lines indicate median values, boxes indicate 25th and 75th percentiles.

FIG. 66A-B shows SAM activates characterized and uncharacterized lincRNA transcripts. a, Fold activation of 6 lincRNAs plotted against the location of the sgRNA2.0 relative to the TSS. All values are mean+−SEM with n=3. b, Correlation of sgRNA lincRNA-activation efficiency with sgRNA target distance to the TSS. Activation efficiencies of each sgRNA for the same target lincRNA is normalized against the highest-activating sgRNA. In contrast to coding genes, no significant correlation is observed. Blue lines indicate median values, boxes indicate 25th and 75th percentiles.

FIG. 67A-E shows simultaneous activation of endogenous genes using multiplexed sgRNA2.0 expression. a, Activation of individual genes by single sgRNA2.0s with dCas9-VP64 and MS2-p65-HSF1. b, Simultaneous activation of ten genes using a mixture of ten sgRNA2.0s each targeting a different gene. c, The relative efficiency of activation of individual sgRNA2.0 varies depending on the target gene and the number of different-gene targeting sgRNA2.0s. d, Effect of sgRNA dilution on gene activation efficiency. Results are plotted as percentage of activation relative to the fold activation of a single undiluted sgRNA2.0 against the target gene. e, Correlation plot between the activation efficiency of a single 10-fold diluted sgRNA2.0 and the activation efficiency of the same sgRNA2.0 delivered within a mixture of ten different-gene targeting sgRNA2.0s. Performance during sgRNA dilution is significantly predictive of performance in multiplexing, suggesting a guide-autonomous component of multiplexing behaviour. All values are mean+−SEM with n=3.

FIG. 68A-E shows genome-scale lentiviral screen in mammalian cells using SAM. a, Design of three lentiviral vectors for expressing sgRNA2.0, dCas9-VP64, and MS2-p65-HSF1. Each vector contains a distinct selection marker to enable co-selection of cells expressing all three vectors. b, Lentiviral delivery of SAM components was tested by first generating 293FT cell lines stably integrated with dCas9-VP64 and MS2-p65-HSF1, and subsequently transducing these cells with single-gene targeting lentiviral sgRNA2.0s at MOI <0.2. Transcription activation efficiency is measured 4 days post sgRNA2.0s lentivirus transduction and selection with Zeocin or Puromycin. All values are mean+−SEM with n=3. c, Flow chart of transcription activation screening using SAM. d, Cumulative frequency of sgRNA2.0s 3 and 21 days after transduction in A375 cells. Shift in the 21-day curve represents the depletion in a subset of sgRNA2.0s. Less than 0.1% of all guides are not detected at day 3 (detected by less than 10 reads). e, Gene categories showing significant depletion based on Ingenuity Pathway Analysis (p<0.01 after B-H FDR correction). Categories on the left are based on the 1000 most depleted guides and categories on the right are based on the 1000 genes with the highest depletion based on the average of all 3 guides/gene.

FIG. 69A-F shows genome-scale gene activation screening identifies mediators of BRAF inhibitor resistance. a, Box plot showing the distribution of sgRNA2.0 frequencies at different time points post lentiviral transduction, with and without treatment with PLX-4720. Vehicle is DMSO. Two infection replicates are shown. b, Scatterplot showing enrichment of specific sgRNA2.0s after PLX-4720 treatment. c, Identification of top candidate genes using the RIGER P value analysis (KS method) based on the average of both infection replicates. Genes are organized by positions within chromosomes. d, RIGER P values for the top 100 hits from SAM and GeCKO screens, for gene perturbations resulting in BRAF inhibitor resistance. e, The top 10 shared candidates from Puromycin and Zeocin screens, identified using RIGER are shown. For both screens, the percent of unique sgRNA2.0s targeting each gene that are in the top 5% of all enriched sgRNA2.0s is plotted. f, Heat map of z-scores with each column representing a different BRAF^(V600) melanoma short-term culture and rows representing expression of BRAF-inhibitor marker genes and signatures (upper panel), expression of SAM top screen hits (middle panel) and screen signature scores (see methods for signature generation using single-sample Gene Set Enrichment Analysis) (bottom panel). A distinct transcriptional state of genes and signatures represents BRAF-inhibition resistance as previously defined (Konieczkowski, D. J. et al. Cancer discovery 4, 816-827, doi:10.1158/2159-8290.CD-13-0424 (2014)). Columns are sorted by MITF expression with high expression indicating BRAF inhibitor sensitivity. Top hits from the SAM screen are significantly associated with the resistant state (MITF low expression and high levels of resistance markers). A subset of samples were previously tested for PLX sensitivity (blue text/arrows) and resistance (red text/arrows). IC: Information Coefficient (see methods for details). P-values are generated using a permutation test (n=10,000).

FIG. 70A-E shows structure-guided engineering of Cas9 sgRNA. a, Schematic of the sgRNA stem-loops showing contacts between each stem-loop and Cas9. Contacting amino acid residues are highlighted in yellow. Tetraloop and stem-loop 2 do not have any contacts with Cas9 whereas stem-loops 1 and 3 share extensive contacts with Cas9. b, sgRNA2.0 with MS2 stem-loops inserted into the tetraloop and stem-loop 2. c, Addition of a second NLS or an alternative HNH domain inactivating point mutation in Cas9 improve efficiency of transcription activation for MYOD1. d, dCas9-VP64 activators exhibit improved performance by recruitment of MS2-P65 to the tetraloop and stem-loop 2. Addition of an AU flip or extension in the tetraloop does not increased effectiveness of dCas9-mediated transcription activation. e, Tetraloop and stem-loop 2 are amenable to replacement with MS2 stem-loops. Base changes from the sgRNA2.0 scaffold are shown at the respective positions, with dashes indicating unaltered bases and bases below dashes indicating insertions. Deletions are indicated by absence of dashes at respective positions. All figures are n=3 and mean±SEM. FIG. 70A discloses SEQ ID NOS 451-452, 16 and 453, respectively, in order of appearance. FIG. 70B discloses SEQ ID NO: 454. FIG. 70D discloses SEQ ID NOS 455-458, 455 and 459-460, respectively, in order of appearance. FIG. 70E discloses SEQ ID NOS 455-456, 455 and 461-464, respectively, in order of appearance.

FIG. 71A-C shows SAM mediates efficient activation of a panel of 12 genes with low levels of non-specific activation. a, Comparison of the activation levels of 12 genes with dCas9-VP64 in combination with MS2-P65, MS2-P65-HSF1, or MS2-P65-MYOD1. MS2-P65-HSF1 mediated significantly higher activation than MS2-P65 alone for 9 out of 12 genes. The best guide out of 8 tested for each gene (see FIG. 2 a ) was used is used in this experiment. Activation levels for each type of MS2-fusion is presented as a percentage relative to the activation achieved using MS2-P65. b, Non-specific background activation by dCas9-VP64 and MS2-p65-HSF1 activator components was determined for all 12 genes. dCas9-VP64 and MS2-p65-HSF1 were co-transfected with non-targeting (scrambled) guides. Cells transfected with GFP were used to measure the baseline expression level for each gene. Only activation of IL1R2 by scrambled guides is significantly different from GFP samples. p<0.05 by Student's t-test. c, The average activation for both scrambled guides shown as % of the on-target activation as shown in a. Activation by scrambled guides measures below 1% of on-target activation for all 12 genes. Error bars indicate SEM. n=3.

FIG. 72 shows activation of characterized and uncharacterized lincRNAs by SAM. Six lincRNAs were targeted using SAM. For each lincRNA, 8 sgRNAs were designed to target the proximal promoter region (+1 to −800 bp from the TSS) with 4 different MS2 activators (MS2-P65-HSF1, MS2-P65-MyoD1, MS2-P65, and MS2-VP64) in combination with dCas9-VP64. MS2 activators with a combination of 2 different domains (MS2-p65-HSF1 or MS2-p65-MyoD1) consistently provided the highest activation for each lincRNA, p<0.01 for MS2-p65-HSF1 or MS2-p65-MyoD1 vs. MS2-p65.

FIG. 73 shows multiplexed activation using SAM. Activation of a panel of 10 genes by combinations of 2, 4, 6, or 8 sgRNAs simultaneously. The mean fold up-regulation is shown on a log₁₀ scale. Error bars indicate S.E.M. and n=3.

FIG. 74A-B shows activation of a panel of 12 genes as a function of the dosage of SAM components. a, Effect of MS2-P65-HSF1 and dCas9-VP64 dilution, at 1:1, 1:4, 1:10, and 1:50 of the original dosage for each component, on the effectiveness of transcription up-regulation. The amount of sgRNA expression plasmid is kept constant. b, Effect of diluting all three SAM components (dCas9-VP64, MS2-p65-HSF1, and sgRNA2.0) at 1:4, 1:10, and 1:50 of the original dosage for each component. Fold up-regulation is calculated using GFP-transfected cells as the baseline. Error bars indicate S.E.M. and n=3.

FIG. 75A-B shows components of Cancer survival and proliferation pathways are depleted in a genome-wide SAM screen. IPA analysis on the top 300 depleted genes based on average depletion of all 3 guides/gene resulted in 2 networks with scores >30. Depleted genes are indicated in red. a, network score=39 with 26 depleted genes in the network. b, network score=37 with 25 depleted genes in the network. Components on all layers of both networks exhibit depletion.

FIG. 76A-D shows genome-scale lentiviral screen using Puromycin-resistant SAM sgRNA2.0 library. a, Cumulative frequency of sgRNA2.0s 3 and 21 days after transduction of A375 cells with Puromycin-resistant sgRNA2.0 lentivirus. Shift in the 21-day curve represents the depletion of a subset of sgRNA2.0s. b, Box plot showing the distribution of sgRNA2.0 frequencies at different time points post lentiviral transduction with the Puromycin library, after treatment with DMSO vehicle or PLX-4720. Two infection replicates are shown. c, Identification of top candidate genes using the RIGER P value analysis (KS method) based on the average of both infection replicates. Genes are organized by positions within chromosomes. d, Overlap between the top 20 hits from the Zeo and Puro screens. Genes belonging to the same family are indicated by the same color. There is a 50% overlap between the top hits of each screen as shown at the intersection of the Venn diagram.

FIG. 77 shows validation of top screen hits using Cancer Cell Line Encyclopedia expression and pharmacological data from additional melanoma cell lines. Heat map of z-scores, with each column representing a different BRAF^(V600) melanoma cell lines and rows representing sensitivity to different drugs (upper panel), expression of SAM top screen hits (middle panel), and SAM screen signature scores (bottom panel, see methods for signature generation). Drug sensitivity is measured as 8-Activity Area (AA) (Barretina, J. et al. Nature 483, 603-607, doi:10.1038/nature11003 (2012)). The melanoma cell lines are sorted by PLX drug sensitivity where a lower value (blue) corresponds to increased sensitivity. Also displayed are the sensitivities to related MAPK inhibitors. There is a fraction of cell lines that demonstrate resistance to MAPK inhibitors and in these cell lines, many of the SAM top hits are highly expressed. The signatures comprised of these top hits also are highly scored within the resistant cell lines. Associations are measured using the information coefficient (IC) between PLX-4720 sensitivity (index) and each of the features and p-values are determined using a permutation test. RAF inhibitors: PLX4720 and RAF265; MEK inhibitors: AZD6244 and PD-0325901.

FIG. 78 shows validation of top screen hits in primary and metastatic melanoma patient samples from The Cancer Genome Atlas. Heat map of z-scores with each column representing a different BRAF^(V600) patient melanoma (primary or metastatic) and rows representing expression of gene/signature markers for BRAF-inhibitor sensitivity (top panel), expression of SAM top screen hits (middle panel) and screen signature scores (see methods for signature generation) (bottom panel). Because no pharmacological data is available for these TCGA melanoma samples, TCGA gene expression data is first mapped onto a previously defined transcriptional state for BRAF-inhibitor sensitivity/resistance based on a panel of gene markers and signatures (Konieczkowski, D. J. et al. Cancer discovery 4, 816-827, doi:10.1158/2159-8290.CD-13-0424 (2014)). The expression of top SAM screen individual hits is increased and significantly associated with tumors displaying a resistant state (defined as low MITF expression and high expression of resistant markers/signatures). Signatures comprised of the top genes from the SAM screens also are significantly associated with the resistant tumors. The panel of melanoma samples is sorted by decreasing MITF expression where a higher value (red) corresponds to samples that are more sensitive to BRAF inhibition. Associations are measured using the information coefficient (IC) between MITF expression (index) and each of the features and p-values are determined using a permutation test.

FIG. 79A-D shows correlation between sgRNA sequence content and level of depletion in significantly depleted genes. Heat maps of sgRNA nucleotide content versus depletion after 21 days. sgRNA targeting significantly depleted genes (from RIGER analysis) in sgRNA-zeo (a, b) or sgRNA-puro (c, d) screens were analyzed for trends with G content (a, c) or T content (b, d) in the sgRNA sequence. sgRNA depletion is positively correlated with G content and negatively correlated with T content. Other bases analyzed (A and C) had significant (p<0.0007) but weak (r<0.2) negative correlation.

FIG. 80A-EE shows exemplary supplementary sequences of Example 20. FIGS. 80A-80EE disclose SEQ ID NOS 150, 147-149, 151, 465-467, 167, 465-466, 468-469, 465-466, 468, 470-471, 465-466, 468, 472-474, 466-467, 476, 474, 466, 468, 476-479, 466-467, 480-483, 465-466, 468, 470, 480, 484-490, 486-487 and 491-492, respectively, in order of appearance.

FIG. 81A-E shows exemplary target guide sequences used in Example 20. FIGS. 81A-81E disclose SEQ ID NOS 493, 152-153 and 494-636, respectively, in order of appearance.

FIG. 82A-I shows top 300 depleted genes for A375 in Example 20. Mean depletion for each gene is given as the log 2 ratio of Day 21 vs. Day 3 averaged over all sg RNAs for the gene.

FIG. 83A-C shows top 100 genes from the output of the RIGER algorithm for the sgRNA-Zeo PLX screen comparing PLX (mean of the two replicates at Day 21) to DMSO control (mean of the two replicates at Day 21) in Example 20. The Kolmogorov-Smirnov method was used to score genes.

FIG. 84A-C shows top 100 genes from the output of the RIGER algorithm for the sgRNA-Puro PLX screen comparing PLX (mean of the two replicates at Day 21) to DMSO control (mean of the two replicates at Day 21) in Example 20. The Kolmogorov-Smirnov method was used to score genes.

FIG. 85 shows TaqMan qPCR probe ID's used to quantify relative RNA expression levels for each gene (Life Technologies).

FIG. 86 : shows testing of chimera between Sp, Sa and St3 Cas9 based on crystal structure. A) domain organization and amino acid (AA) positions of Sp Cas9. The REC lobe is a newly identified structural component of Cas9. B) Chimera maps of partial or complete swaps of the Nuc lobe, with AA positions of chimera boundaries indicated C) indel % achieved with each corresponding chimera on the left. Labels indicate the sgRNA used. TGS=targeting sequences (20 bp spacer portion of the sgRNA), BB=sgRNA backbone.

The figures herein are for illustrative purposes only and are not necessarily drawn to scale.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

In particular, Applicants have found that the MS2-binding loop ggccAACATGAGGATCACCCATGTCTGCAGggcc (SEQ ID NO: 8) may replace nucleotides+13 to +16 and nucleotides+53 to +56 of the standard sgRNA backbone. The resulting structure is an sgRNA scaffold in which the tetraloop and stemloop 2 sequences have been replaced by an MS2 binding loop. Without being bound by theory, the tetraloop and stemloop 2 were selected for replacement based on information obtained from the Cas9/RNA/DNA crystal structure. Specifically, the tetraloop and stemloop 2 were found to protrude from the Cas9 protein in such a way which suggested that adding an MS2 binding loop would not interfere with any Cas9 residues. Additionally, the proximity of the tetraloop and stemloop 2 sites to the DNA suggested that localization to these locations would result in a high degree of interaction between the DNA and any recruited protein, such as a transcriptional activator.

In some embodiments, the guide is modified such that nucleotides corresponding to +13 to +16 and/or nucleotides corresponding to +53 to +56 of the standard sgRNA backbone are replaced by the distinct RNA.

In some embodiments, the adaptor protein is an RNA-binding protein. The RNA-binding protein recognises corresponding distinct RNA sequences, which may be aptamers. For example, the MS2 RNA-binding protein recognises and binds specifically to the MS2 aptamer (or visa versa).

In some embodiments, the repression domain(s) for the guide and/or the CRISPR enzyme may be those show in Example 15 to act as follows:

-   -   SID4X domain, which represses transcriptional activity;     -   KRAB domain, which represses transcriptional activity;     -   the NUE domain, which increases repressive histone methylation;         and     -   the NcoR domain, which recruits histone deacetylases leading to         repressive histone modifications.

Exemplary sequences for repressor domains are to be found in Example 15.

Example 15 also shows an orthogonal approach, see particularly FIG. 48 . One guide with a first aptamer/RNA-binding protein pair can be linked or fused to an activator, whilst a second guide with a second aptamer/RNA-binding protein pair can be linked or fused to a repressor. The guides are for different targets (loci), so this allows one gene to be activated and one repressed. For example, the following schematic shows such an approach:

Guide 1—MS2 aptamer-------MS2 RNA-binding protein-------VP64 activator; and

Guide 2—PP7 aptamer-------PP7 RNA-binding protein-------SID4x repressor.

FIG. 48 is an illustration of orthogonal PP7/MS2 gene targeting. In this example, sgRNA targeting different loci are modified with distinct RNA loops in order to recruit MS2-VP64 or PP7-SID4X, which activate and repress their target loci, respectively. PP7 is the RNA-binding coat protein of the bacteriophage Pseudomonas. Like MS2, it binds a specific RNA sequence and secondary structure. The PP7 RNA-recognition motif is distinct from that of MS2. Consequently, PP7 and MS2 can be multiplexed to mediate distinct effects at different genomic loci simultaneously. For example, an sgRNA targeting locus A can be modified with MS2 loops, recruiting MS2-VP64 activators, while another sgRNA targeting locus B can be modified with PP7 loops, recruiting PP7-SID4X repressor domains. In the same cell, dCas9 can thus mediate orthogonal, locus-specific modifications. This principle can be extended to incorporate other orthogonal RNA-binding proteins such as Q-beta.

The use of two different aptamers (distinct RNA) allows an activator-adaptor protein fusion and a repressor-adaptor protein fusion to be used, with different guides, to activate expression of one gene, whilst repressing another. They, along with their different guides can be administered together, or substantially together, in a multiplexed approach. A large number of such modified guides can be used all at the same time, for example 10 or 20 or 30 and so forth, whilst only one (or at least a minimal number) of Cas9s to be delivered, as a comparatively small number of Cas9s can be used with a large number modified guides. The adaptor protein may be associated (preferably linked or fused to) one or more activators or one or more repressors. For example, the adaptor protein may be associated with a first activator and a second activator. The first and second activators may be the same, but they are preferably different activators. For example, one might be VP64, whilst the other might be p65, although these are just examples and other transcriptional activators are envisaged. Three or more or even four or more activators (or repressors) may be used, but package size may limit the number being higher than 5 different functional domains. Linkers are preferably used, over a direct fusion to the adaptor protein, where two or more functional domains are associated with the adaptor protein. Suitable linkers might include the GlySer linker.

It is also envisaged that the enzyme-guide complex as a whole may be associated with two or more functional domains. For example, there may be two or more functional domains associated with the enzyme, or there may be two or more functional domains associated with the guide (via one or more adaptor proteins), or there may be one or more functional domains associated with the enzyme and one or more functional domains associated with the guide (via one or more adaptor proteins).

The fusion between the adaptor protein and the activator or repressor may include a linker. For example, GlySer linkers GGGS (SEQ ID NO: 1) can be used. They can be used in repeats of 3 ((GGGGS)₃) or 6, 9 or even 12 (SEQ ID NOS 9-12, respectively) or more, to provide suitable lengths, as required. Linkers can be used between the RNA-binding protein and the functional domain (activator or repressor), or between the CRISPR Enzyme (Cas9) and the functional domain (activator or repressor). The linkers the user to engineer appropriate amounts of“mechanical flexibility”;

In some embodiments, use of an NLS is envisaged. Applicants found that the NLS from SV40 was helpful in this regard, especially when using lentiviral delivery methods.

A PP7 variant may be used in some embodiments. For example, Applicants found that the PP7 Pseudomonas bacteriophage coat protein (with amino acids 68-69 mutated to SG and amino acids 70-75 deleted from the wild type protein as described in Wu, Bin, Jeffrey A Chao, and Robert H. Singer. “Fluorescence fluctuation spectroscopy enables quantitative imaging of single nRNAs in living cells. “Biophysical journal 102.12 (2012): 2936-2944. and Chao, Jeffrey A., et al. “Structural basis for the coevolution of a viral RNA-protein complex.” Nature structural & molecular biology 15.1 (2007): 103-105), worked well. As such, in some embodiments, where the adaptor protein is an RNA-binding protein and that RNA-binding protein is PP7, the PP7 may be the variant described above, i.e. with amino acids 68-69 mutated to SG and/or amino acids 70-75 deleted from the wild type protein.

Similarly, an MS2 variant may also be used, such as the N55 mutant, especially the N55K mutant. This is the N55K mutant of the MS2 bacteriophage coat protein (shown to have higher binding affinity than wild type MS2 in Lim, F., M. Spingola, and D. S. Peabody. “Altering the RNA binding specificity of a translational repressor.” Journal of Biological Chemistry 269.12 (1994): 9006-9010), and was shown to work in Example 14

Applicants have shown in Example 13 that both insertions in the tetraloop and loop 2 are effective. In this particular example, the most efficient combination uses an insertion of aptamers (in this case MS2 loops, but we later show that other aptamers may be used as well) in both in the tetraloop and in loop 2 of the sgRNA. We also show that this may be used in combination with a dCas9-vp64 and MS2-vp64 construct, in other words where the CRISPR enzyme is also modified. This new activator design (illustrated in FIG. 44 and shown as red bar for the TL+L2: Ms2 guide in FIG. 45 ) was found to mediate much higher target gene upregulation compared to the previous design (illustrated in FIG. 43 and shown as the green bar for the regular guide in FIG. 45 ).

It is also envisaged that other activators may be used. For instance, Example 14, showed that an improved Cas9 activator architecture consists of a sgRNA with MS2 loop insertions in the tetraloop and loop 2 in combination with either MS2-VP64 and dCas9-P65 or MS2-P65 and dCas9-VP64. In other words, 2 different activators can be used, one associated with the CRISPR enzyme (Cas9) and one with the guide via the aptamer. Applicants showed increased effectiveness of this design compared to the standard C-terminal fusion of VP64 to Cas9. Applicants further confirmed the hypothesis that a combination of two different activation domains could improve target gene activation (via synergy, e.g. by recruiting different epigenetic modulators, general transcription factors and co-activators). Applicants also determined that the alternative guide architecture optimized for CRISPR/Cas9 imaging in: Chen, Baohui, et al. “Dynamic Imaging of Genomic Loci in Living Human Cells by an Optimized CRISPR/Cas System.” Cell 155.7 (2013): 1479-1491 did not exhibit any improvement over the standard architecture.

Of course, it is envisaged that the activators in these instances may be replaced with repressors.

Applicants also looked at the arrangement of the distinct RNA sequences (preferably aptamers) within the stem loop 2 and tetraloop of the modified guides of the present invention. Example 14 further looks at the use of GC tracts. These are preferred in some embodiments. The GC tract may be GC or GGGGC or CCCCG or CGCC or compliments thereof or a mixture of C and G from 2 nucleotides up to, for example 10, 15 or 20 nucleotides. In the particular instance, the MS2-binding loop sequence:

(SEQ ID NO: 8) ggccAACATGAGGATCACCCATGTCTGCAGggcc replaced nucleotides +13 to +16 of the standard sgRNA backbone, as above. Of interest here, the sequence CGCC replaced nucleotides +49 to +52 of the standard sgRNA backbone. The sequence GGCG also replaced nucleotides +57 to +60 of the standard sgRNA backbone. The tetraloop MS2-binding loop insertion was designed with the same rationale as described herein. Essentially, CGCC and GGCG sequences replace the stem portion of stemloop 2. The increased base-pairing strength of the CGCC-GGCG stem compared to the original ACTT-AAGT stem was hypothesized to provide additional stability to the stemloop 2 structure, thereby increasing sgRNA performance or longevity.

Accordingly, in some embodiments, one or more GC tracts may replace stem portion of stemloop 2. In some embodiments, one or more GC tracts may replace stem portion of the tetraloop.

When reference is made to the stemloop 2 or tetraloop being modified (including replaced) by distinct RNA sequence(s) then this preferably encompasses modification (or replacement) of the 3 or 4 nucleotides of the guide that were found to protrude beyond the enzyme-sgRNA-DNA complex. Suitable numbering will be apparent based on the secondary structure of the guide on its own, i.e. by looking for the loops corresponding to the stem loop 2 and the tetraloop (or by engineering them in), but exemplary number is around +13-16 and/or either side of +49-52 (with one or two nucleotides leeway either side possible, such as +48-52, or +49 to 53 for example).

A particularly preferred arrangement is to have the aptamer followed by a GGGS linker (SEQ ID NO: 1), preferably (GGGS)₃ (SEQ ID NO: 13), together with an NLS, preferably that from SV40.

Applicants, in Example 16, generated a dCas9-based light-inducible MS2-effector, characterized by an MS2-CIB1 recruitment component bound to dCas9-sgRNA, and a CRY2-VP64 transcriptional activator domain. Upon activation with blue light, CRY2-VP64 associate with MS2-CIB1, enabling the recruitment of the transcriptional machinery to the target locus.

Thus, in some embodiments, the adaptor protein may be fused to (or otherwise associated with) a first inducible element, whilst the functional domain may be fused (or otherwise associated) to a second and complimentary inducible element. The complementarity may be provided by heterodimeric binding partners. A preferred example of first and second complementary inducible elements is the CIB1 and CRY2 system. The CIB1 domain is a heterodimeric binding partner of the light-sensitive Cryptochrome 2 (CRY2).

In Example 17 Applicants replaced dCas9 Rec2 domain with a transcriptional effector domain; replace dCas9 HNH domain with a transcriptional effector domain; inserted a transcriptional effector domain at sites of flexible linkers within dCas9 (amino acid 553, 575, or 1153); and created catalytically inactive dCas9 by combination of D10A and N863A mutations, rather than D10A and H840A mutations. Any of these are preferred in certain distinct embodiments.

In some embodiments, Rec2 may be modified, preferably where amino acids 175-306 of dCas9 were replaced with one of the following inserts, with subdomains listed from N- to C-terminus:

-   -   VP64 activation domain     -   3×GGGGS linker (SEQ ID NO: 9), VP64 activation domain, 3×GGGGS         linker (SEQ ID NO: 9)     -   p65 activation domain     -   3×GGGGS linker (SEQ ID NO: 9), p65 activation domain, 3×GGGGS         linker (SEQ ID NO: 9)

In some embodiments, HNH may be modified. For example, in Applicants replaced AA775-901 (of the HNH domain). This may be with either an activator, such as vp64 or P65, or a repressor. The activator or repressor may be flanked by a (GGGGS)3 (SEQ ID NO: 9) or a (GGGGS)6 linker (SEQ ID NO: 10) on both sides of the inserted transcriptional effector domain.

Insertions of transcriptional domains into 3 loops of dCas9 are also envisaged. In addition to replacing an existing domain (e.g. HNH, Rec2) with a transcriptional effector domain, it may be useful, in some embodiments, to insert a transcriptional effector domain at different positions in the Cas9 protein. Applicants identified three favorable positions: G533, F575 and K1153. The locations of G533 and K1153 in the Cas9 protein is indicated in the corresponding FIG. 49 . Applicants insert either vp64 or P65 flanked by a (GGGGS)1 (SEQ ID NO: 14) or a (GGGGS)3 linker (SEQ ID NO: 9) on both sides of the inserted transcriptional effector domain at these three locations. As such, in some embodiments, the Cas9 may be modified by insertion of one or more functional domains at any one or more of position corresponding to G533, F575 and K1153 according to SpCas9.

In some embodiments, novel dCas9 mutants are provided. Catalytically inactive dCas9 may be generated by combination of D10A and N863A mutations, rather than D10A and H840A mutations, as shown in Example 18. This numbering refers to Sp Cas9, so corresponding positions in orthologs are envisaged. We also provide N580A as a preferred alternative in Sa Cas9, especially in combination with D10.

As shown in Example 19, N863, especially N863A, referring to Sp Cas9, is also useful in a dead Cas9 and is preferred in some embodiments.

This Example also showed that a combination of different activator domains had an improved effect. For example the construct with a p65-HSF1 fusion was found to be a more potent activator than the construct with p65 alone (FIGS. 56 and 57 ). Thus, fusions of two or more activators are preferred in some embodiments. Fusions of two or more repressors are also preferred in some embodiments. The activators or repressors may be in any combination of those known in the art and in particular those especially reference herein.

Of particular note was the use in this Example of an orthogonal system, a combined approach using one activator and one repressor. Different guides and different RNA/adaptor protein pairs allowed for activation at one locus and repression at another locus.

Applicants observed significant activation for each of a number purportedly difficult gene targets. Additionally, Applicants observed that the success rate of guide sequences typically increased with closer proximity to the transcriptional start site (TSS) of the target gene. In a preferred embodiment of the invention, for particular targets, within 200 bp of the TSS is deemed to be an advantageous window to select guide RNAs. This information may also be useful for selection of sgRNA guide sequences.

Multiplexed activation has also been shown in Example 19. One important possible advantage of the ability of Applicants' system to provide robust activation with a single guide would be the capacity to easily activate a panel of genes simultaneously (by co-delivery to multiple guides for these genes), which would be intractable if a large number of guides would be required for activation of each gene alone. In order to test the ability of Applicants' system (NLS-dCAS(D10,H840A)-NLS-VP64 in combination with MS2-NLS-P65-HSF1) to activate multiple genes simultaneously, Applicants co-transfected guides targeting 2, 4, 6, 8 or 10 genes at once. Activation of multiple genes was highly successful, as even for a combination of 10 genes each gene was activated significantly. (see FIGS. 60-63 ). In some embodiments, therefore, an adaptor protein may advantageously be linked or fused to fused or linked activators, as also discussed above, or repressors. This may then be delivered with multiple guides to different targets. This is therefore especially useful in a screening method where the activation or repression of one or more genes is to be interrogated.

Example 20 is particularly interesting. This focuses on the identification of two 4 nt stretches in the guides that are exposed “outside” of Cas9-guide-target DNA complex. One 4 nt stretch falls in the tetraloop, the other 4 nt stretch falls in the stem loop 2. These 4 nt stretches can be replaced by aptamer sequence. The one or more aptamer(s) is a polynucleotide and may be DNA or RNA, but RNA is preferred. The aptamer has a corresponding RNA-binding protein that recognises a specific RNA sequence.

Thus, the MS2 system used here comprises an RNA sequence inserted into the guide (at one or both of the above locations) and a corresponding MS2 (RNA-binding) protein. The RNA-binding protein may then be fused to a functional domain such as an activator or a repressor. Instead of being fused directly to a functional domain, the RNA-binding protein could be fused to a further element such as an antibody that can then bind to and recognise a functional domain or a molecule fused to a functional domain, similar to the heterduplex CIB1-Cry2 system described above. This may allow for greater temporal or spatial control.

In short, a specific RNA sequence may be inserted into the exposed guide loop(s) and a corresponding RNA-binding protein may be used, whether that is fused to a functional domain, or a further element which in turn recognises or binds specifically to a functional domain. The functional domain may be a transacting activator or a repressor.

This can be used in Screening Methods to assess G.O.F (Gain Of Function) and/or L.O.F. (Loss of Function).

Identification of the stemloop 2 and the tetraloop has been discussed above, but the skilled person may also want to refer to FIGS. 44, 48, 64 (especially a and b) and 70 for guidance. FIG. 70 shows nucleotide numbering corresponding to the stem loop 2 and the tetraloop. For example, in some embodiments, the tetraloop is or includes nucleotides G29 to A41 of the guide tested and comprises 5′-GCUAGAAUAGCA-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 15) (positions 29-41). Guide nucleotides, such as C40, may preferably interact with Cas9 amino acid Arg340. In some embodiments, stem loop 2 may be or include nucleotides A68 to G81 of the guide used (5′-AACUUGAAAAAGUG-3′) (SEQ ID NO: 16). Enzyme amino acids His1349 and Ser1351 may, in some embodiments, interact with guide nucleotides, such as A68. In some embodiments, Lys33 and Tyr1356 may interact with nucleotide G81.

In some embodiments, it is preferable to use complimentary GGCC inserts (GC tracts) flanking the MS insert (the 5′-GGCC-3′ being complimentary to the same sequence at the 3′ end (and in the opposite orientation i.e. 3′CCGG-5′, as shown FIG. 70 ).

Although single MS2 addition (i.e. to one or other of the tetraloop or stem loop 2) shows an improvement in terms of Gain of Function (gene upregulation) compared to a standard guide, the double addition (MS2 on both loops) shows even stronger upregulation. The use of two or more functional domains with the guide is therefore preferred.

As mentioned herein, having one activator, such as VP64, bound to Cas9 and a separate similar activator, again VP64 in this example, bound to the guide via MS2 shows the greatest improvement in terms of Gain of Function (gene upregulation). Other activators or repressors may be exchanged here for the activator mentioned.

We also show in this Example an improvement in terms of Gain of Function (gene upregulation) compared to a prior art MS-guide RNA arrangement where the MS2 is attached at the 3′ end of the guide. This art approach is as opposed to the present loops which are both internal and certainly not 3′ terminal or are at least followed (in the 3′ direction) by an additional loop (stem loop 3).

LincRNAs (a non-coding RNA produced from bi-directional promoters—the other direction being RNA corresponding to the gene of interest) may also be targeted via the guides and/or interrogated.

This Example also shows that lentivirus based delivery is useful. Overall, the system showed enhanced transcriptional activation. It is thus useful in a genome-wide transcriptional activation or overexpression screening methods. For example, the invention may be used to identify genes whose upregulation causes a certain phenotypic result—in this example, it was resistance to BRAF kinase inhibitor in cancer cells.

Applicants, without being bound by theory, believe that guide direction does not significantly affect activation activity, instead the primary factor influencing activation potency is that the sgRNA site is located within the −200 to +1 bp proximal promoter region. This region is therefore a preferred target for the guide(s).

The adaptor protein (and hence its corresponding distinct RNA (preferably an aptamer) is preferably chosen from within bacteriophage coat proteins. Preferred examples include those already listed elsewhere herein.

Example 21 shows that an inducible structural design activation mediator transgenic model, in this case a mouse, may be established. A repression model may be similarity generated. Preferably, a mouse engineered with the Lox-Stop-polyA-Lox(LSL) cassette upstream to the coding region of the SpCas9-VP64 fusion protein is established. A second mouse may be engineered with the Lox-Stop-polyA-Lox(LSL) cassette upstream to the coding region of the SpCas9-VP64 fusion protein and upstream to the coding region of the MS2-P65-HSF1 fusion protein.

Example 22 investigates targeted lincRNAs of unknown function to determine aberrant phenotypes. It includes an investigation of Gain of Function and Loss of function in human cell lines (using Cre inducibility) and mice through use of guides that target the regulatory regions of these genes, with guides including an activator or a repressor.

When looking at lincRNAs, guides may be designed to target the promoter region. Ideally, this should be within 1000 nucleotides upstream of the TTS of the target, in this case, lincRNAs of unknown function. Animals, such as mice, may then be screened for aberrant phenotypes.

Cells for which the sgRNA has an activator may be monitored for Gain of Function, whilst cells for which the sgRNA has a repressor may be monitored for Loss of Function. In this fashion, mammalian, including mouse and human cells, can be screened.

In an aspect, the vector systems used in the methods of the invention comprise one or more lentiviral vector(s). In a preferred embodiment, the one or more lentiviral vectors may comprise a codon optimized nuclear localization signal (NLS), a codon optimized P2A bicistronic linker sequence and an optimally placed U6 driven guide RNA cassette. In another aspect the vector system comprises two lentiviral vectors, wherein one lentiviral vector comprises the Cas9 enzyme and the other lentiviral vector comprises the guide RNA selected from the libraries of the invention. In an embodiment of the invention, each vector has a different selection marker, e.g. a different antibiotic resistance marker. The invention also comprehends kits comprising the libraries of the invention. In certain aspects, the kit comprises a single container comprising vectors comprising the library of the invention. In other aspects, the kit comprises a single container comprising plasmids comprising the library of the invention. The invention also comprehends kits comprising a panel comprising a selection of unique CRISPR-Cas system guide sequences from the library of the invention, wherein the selection is indicative of a particular physiological condition. In preferred embodiments, the targeting is of about 100 or more sequences, about 1000 or more sequences or about 20,000 or more sequences or the entire genome. In other embodiments a panel of target sequences is focused on a relevant or desirable pathway, such as an immune pathway or cell division.

Accordingly, Examples 21 and 22 show that creation of a non-human animal or cell may be realistically provided. It has preferably been altered, or is a progeny of said altered animal or cell, to constitutively or conditionally express a Cas9 with one or more mutations to modify catalytic activity, as discussed herein. The model may be used for screening with appropriate guides and with different adaptors and activators or repressors as discussed herein for multiplexing to show up and/or down-regulation of target gene function. Thus, corresponding cell lines and transgenic mammalian models are provided. Further guidance on models and cell lines is provided herein.

The exposed or extraneous portion of the guide (when the guide-Cas9-DNA complex is formed) is preferably a 4 (four) nucleotide stretch. In some embodiments, the stretch may be in the tetraloop. In some embodiments, the stretch may be in the stem loop 2. In some embodiments, stretches in both the tetraloop and the stem loop 2 are envisaged.

This stretch may be modified, altered or entirely replaced. It is not generally preferred to reduce the number of nucleotides in the exposed stretch to less than 4 for stearic reasons as this could affect the secondary structure of the rest of the guide and thus affect formation of the Cas9-guide-DNA complex or the exposure of the stretch.

It may be modified or altered in that all four of the original 4 nucleotides in the stretch are retained and additions (or further nucleotides) are made between 1 and 2, 2 and 3, or 3 and 4. It is also envisaged that additions may be made immediately 5′ to 1 or 3′ immediately to 4. The stem may be flexible, but it is preferred that it is largely self-complementary throughout.

Unafold is a software tool that can be used to help predict RNA secondary structure in the guide and so assist the skilled person in determine what changes to the guide RNA may be acceptable within the framework discussed herein.

Ideally, the loop feature should be retained but protein binding section of the distinct RNA added to the guide will determine this. The non-loop ends abutting the edge of the enzyme should ideally be retained in the sense that they need to be present, but the primary sequence of the original guide can be changed, for example by insertion of one or more GC tract(s). Ideally, this should be done at the non-loop (non-protein-binding end) of the distinct RNA added, which may be extended. The secondary structure of the non-protein-binding region of the distinct RNA should preferably form a stem, as mentioned.

It is preferred to avoid bulges or loops in the exposed section (non-protein-binding section of the distinct RNA, i.e. that between the edge of the enzyme complex and the protein binding domain of the distinct RNA/Aptamer). Rather, it is preferred to retain a stem as secondary structure in the exposed section.

A stem may be formed in the RNA through use of complimentary sections of roughly the same length, with mismatches minimized. The maximum length of the stem (or number of nucleotides forming the stem in both the 5′ to 3′ and 3′ to 5′ strands) is preferably 100 nucleotides or so in total (i.e. 2 sections of approx. 50 nucleotides) to reduce stearic effects and reduce possible formation of additional secondary or tertiary structure in the nucleotides. However, 50-60 nucleotides may be a more preferable maximum, but given the general need to keep package size down, 10 to 20 or 30 is most preferable, whilst, 8, 10 or 12 is most preferred.

A preferred minimum length is 4 nucleotides either side of the protein-binding loop.

Also provided are methods of upregulation of gene expression in a target locus comprising administration of the present modified guides directed to the target, where the adaptor protein is associated with an activator. The CRISPR enzyme may also be modified with a functional domain.

Also provided are methods of downregulation of gene expression in a target locus comprising administration of the present modified guides directed to the target, where the adaptor protein is associated with a repressor. The CRISPR enzyme may also be modified with a functional domain.

Such methods may be used in a method of treating a subject in need thereof, for example a subject requiring gene upregulation or gene downregulation, as appropriate. A multiplex method may also be used where one gene is upregulated and another is down regulated for instance by following the orthogonal approach discussed herein.

Also provided is the present compositions and systems for use in such methods of treatment. Use of the present compositions and systems in the manufacture of a medicament for such treatment is also provided.

In relation to the guides in general, but specifically in respect of the present modified sgRNA and the complex formed therewith, it is preferable that the guide has one or more of the following features. In some embodiments, the tracr sequence has one or more hairpins and is 30 or more nucleotides in length, more preferably 40 or more nucleotides in length, or more preferably 50 or more nucleotides in length. In some embodiments, the guide sequence is between 10 to 30 nucleotides in length. In some embodiments, the CRISPR/Cas enzyme is a Type II Cas9 enzyme. In some embodiments, the tracr sequence has one or more hairpins and is 30 or more nucleotides in length, more preferably 40 or more nucleotides in length, or more preferably 50 or more nucleotides in length, the guide sequence is between 10 to 30 nucleotides in length and the CRISPR/Cas enzyme is a Type II Cas9 enzyme.

Endogenous transcriptional repression is often mediated by chromatin modifying enzymes such as histone methyltransferases (TINMTs) and deacetylases (HIDACs). Repressive histone effector domains are known and an exemplary list is provided below. In the exemplary table, preference was given to proteins and functional truncations of small size to facilitate efficient viral packaging (for instance via AAV). In general, however, the domains may include HDACs, histone methyltransferases (HMTs), and histone acetyltransferase (HAT) inhibitors, as well as TIDAC and HMN/T recruiting proteins. The functional domain may be or include, in some embodiments, TDAC Effector Domains, TDAC Recruiter Effector Domains, Histone Methyltransferase (IVT) Effector Domains, Histone Methyltransferase (t)T) Recruiter Effector Domains, or Histone Acetyltransferase Inhibitor Effector Domains.

HDAC Effector Domains Full Selected Final Subtype/ Substrate Modification size truncation size Catalytic Complex Name (if known) (if known) Organism (aa) (aa) (aa) domain HDAC I HDAC8 — — X. laevis 325 1-325 325 1-272: HDAC HDAC I RPD3 — — S. cerevisiae 433 19-340  322 19-331: (Vannier) HDAC HDAC MesoLo4 — — M. loti 300 1-300 300 — IV (Gregoretti) HDAC HDAC11 — — H. sapiens 347 1-347 347 14-326: IV (Gao) HDAC HD2 HDT1 — — A. thaliana 245 1-211 211 — (Wu) SIRT I SIRT3 H3K9Ac — H. sapiens 399 143-399  257 126-382: H4K16Ac (Scher) SIRT H3K56Ac SIRT I HST2 — — C. albicans 331 1-331 331 — (Hnisz) SIRT I CobB — — E. coli (K12) 242 1-242 242 — (Landry) SIRT I HST2 — — S. cerevisiae 357 8-298 291 — (Wilson) SIRT III SIRT5 H4K8Ac — H. sapiens 310 37-310  274 41-309: H4K16Ac (Gertz) SIRT SIRT III Sir2A — — P. 273 1-273 273 19-273: falciparum (Zhu) SIRT SIRT IV SIRT6 H3K9Ac — H. sapiens 355 1-289 289 35-274: H3K56Ac (Tennen) SIRT

Accordingly, the repressor domains of the present invention may be selected from histone methyltransferases (HMTs), histone deacetylases (THDACs), histone acetyltransferase (HAT) inhibitors, as well as TIDAC and TIN/T recruiting proteins.

The sDAC domain may be any of those in the table above, namely: HDAC8, RPD3, MesoLo4, HIDAC11, HIDT1, STRT3, HST2, CobB, HST2, SIRT5, Sir2A, or STRT6.

In some embodiment, the functional domain may be a HDAC Recruiter Effector Domain. Preferred examples include those in the Table below, namely MeCP2, MBD2b, Sin3a, NcoR, SALL1, RCOR1. NcoR is exemplified in the present Examples and, although preferred, it is envisaged that others in the class will also be useful.

Table of HDAC Recruiter Effector Domains Full Selected Final Subtype/ Substrate Modification size truncation size Catalytic Complex Name (if known) (if known) Organism (aa) (aa) (aa) domain Sin3a MeCP2 — — R. norvegicus 492 207-492 286 — (Nan) Sin3a MBD2b — — H. sapiens 262  45-262 218 — (Boeke) Sin3a Sin3a — — H. sapiens 1273 524-851 328 627-829: (Laherty) HDAC1 interaction NcoR NcoR — — H. sapiens 2440 420-488 69 — (Zhang) NuRD SALL1 — — M. musculus 1322  1-93 93 — (Lauberth) CoREST RCOR1 — — H. sapiens 482 81-300 (Gu, 220 — Ouyang)

In some embodiment, the functional domain may be a Methyltransferase (CtyT) Effector Domain. Preferred examples include those in the Table below, namely NUE, vSET, EHMT2/G9A, SUV39H1, dim-5, KYP, SUVR4, SET4, SET1, SETD8, and TgSET8. NUE is exemplified in the present Examples and, although preferred, it is envisaged that others in the class will also be useful.

Table of Histone Methyltransferase (HMT) Effector Domains Full Selected Final Subtype/ Substrate Modification size truncation size Catalytic Complex Name (if known) (if known) Organism (aa) (aa) (aa) domain SET NUE H2B, — C. 219 1-219 219 — H3, H4 trachomatis (Pennini) SET vSET — H3K27me3 P. 119 1-119 119 4-112: bursaria (Mujtaba) SET2 chlorella virus SUV39 EHMT2/G9A H1.4K2, H3K9me1/2, M. 1263 969-1263  295 1025- family H3K9, H1K25me1 musculus (Tachibana) 1233: H3K27 preSET, SET, postSET SUV39 SUV39H1 — H3K9me2/3 H. sapiens 412 79-412  334 172- (Snowden) 412: preSET, SET, postSET Suvar3-9 dim-5 — H3K9me3 N. crassa 331 1-331 331 77-331: (Rathert) preSET, SET, postSET Suvar3-9 KYP — H3K9me1/2 A. 624 335-601  267 — (SUVH thaliana (Jackson) subfamily) Suvar3-9 SUVR4 H3K9me1 H3K9me2/3 A. 492 180-492  313 192- (SUVR thaliana (Thorstensen) 462: subfamily) preSET, SET, postSET Suvar4- SET4 — H4K20me3 C. elegans 288 1-288 288 — 20 (Vielle) SET8 SET1 — H4K20me1 C. elegans 242 1-242 242 — (Vielle) SET8 SETD8 — H4K20me1 H. sapiens 393 185-393  209 256- (Couture) 382: SET SET8 TgSET8 — H4K20me1/ T. gondii 1893 1590-1893  304 1749- 2/3 (Sautel) 1884: SET

In some embodiment, the functional domain may be a Histone Methyltransferase (HMT) Recruiter Effector Domain. Preferred examples include those in the Table below, namely Hp1a, PHIF19, and NIPP1.

Table of Histone Methyltransferase (HMT) Recruiter Effector Domains (“GGSG” disclosed as SEQ ID NO: 17) Full Selected Final Subtype/ Substrate Modification size truncation size Catalytic Complex Name (if known) (if known) Organism (aa) (aa) (aa) domain — Hp1a — H3K9me3 M. musculus 191 73-191 119 121-179: (Hathaway) chromoshadow — PHF19 — H3K27me3 H. sapiens 580 (1-250) + 335 163-250: GGSG (Ballaré) PHD2 linker + (500-580) — NIPP1 — H3K27me3 H. sapiens 351 1-329 (Jin) 329 310-329: EED

In some embodiment, the functional domain may be Histone Acetyltransferase Inhibitor Effector Domain. Preferred examples include SET/TAF-1β listed in the Table below.

Table of Histone Acetyltransferase Inhibitor Effector Domains Full Selected Final Subtype/ Substrate Modification size truncation size Catalytic Complex Name (if known) (if known) Organism (aa) (aa) (aa) domain — SET/TAF- — — M. musculus 289 1-289 289 — 1β (Cervoni)

It is also preferred to target endogenous (regulatory) control elements (such as enhancers and silencers) in addition to a promoter or promoter-proximal elements. Thus, the invention can also be used to target endogenous control elements (including enhancers and silencers) in addition to targeting of the promoter. These control elements can be located upstream and downstream of the transcriptional start site (TSS), starting from 200 bp from the TSS to 100 kb away. Targeting of known control elements can be used to activate or repress the gene of interest. In some cases, a single control element can influence the transcription of multiple target genes. Targeting of a single control element could therefore be used to control the transcription of multiple genes simultaneously.

Targeting of putative control elements on the other hand (e.g. by tiling the region of the putative control element as well as 200 bp up to 100 kB around the element) can be used as a means to verify such elements (by measuring the transcription of the gene of interest) or to detect novel control elements (e.g. by tiling 100 kb upstream and downstream of the TSS of the gene of interest). In addition, targeting of putative control elements can be useful in the context of understanding genetic causes of disease. Many mutations and common SNP variants associated with disease phenotypes are located outside coding regions. Targeting of such regions with either the activation or repression systems described herein can be followed by readout of transcription of either a) a set of putative targets (e.g. a set of genes located in closest proximity to the control element) or b) whole-transcriptome readout by e.g. RNAseq or microarray. This would allow for the identification of likely candidate genes involved in the disease phenotype. Such candidate genes could be useful as novel drug targets.

The term “associated with” is used here in respect of how one molecule ‘associates’ with respect to another, for example between an adaptor protein and a functional domain, or between the CRISPR enzyme and a functional domain. In the case of such protein-protein interactions, this association may be viewed in terms of recognition in the way an antibody recognises an epitope. Alternatively, one protein may be associated with another protein via a fusion of the two, for instance one subunit being fused to another subunit. Fusion typically occurs by addition of the amino acid sequence of one to that of the other, for instance via splicing together of the nucleotide sequences that encode each protein or subunit. Alternatively, this may essentially be viewed as binding between two molecules or direct linkage, such as a fusion protein. In any event, the fusion protein may include a linker between the two subunits of interest (i.e. between the enzyme and the functional domain or between the adaptor protein and the functional domain). Thus, in some embodiments, the CRISPR enzyme or adaptor protein is associated with a functional domain by binding thereto. In other embodiments, the CRISPR enzyme or adaptor protein is associated with a functional domain because the two are fused together, optionally via an intermediate linker.

RNA sequences that bind to protein sequences are known, in particular aptamers, but the way in which they bind to, for example, an adaptor protein is that the RNA sequence recognises and forms a complex with a corresponding RNA-binding domain or portion on the protein. This is an analogous situation to the manner in which an antibody recognises an epitope. Thus, in some embodiments, the distinct RNA sequence recognises and binds to a complementary RNA-binding domain or portion on the adaptor protein. In some embodiments, the distinct RNA sequence is an aptamer. The functioning of an aptamer is well-known in the way that is associates with its corresponding protein.

The distinct RNA sequence is a sequence that is different in origin and/or sequence from the guide into which it is inserted. The insertion may include the replacement (deletion) of one or more of the original guide nucleotides at the insertion site. Alternatively, the original guide nucleotides may be retained with the insertion site between them such that the inserted nucleotides separate the previously neighbouring (in terms of primary structure) original nucleotides. The distinct RNA sequence thus may differs in the sense that it has a different primary structure (nucleotide sequence) from the nucleotides that it is replacing. Either way. if replacing or if merely inserting without deletion, the overall primary sequence of the resulting modified guide will change. Thus, in one embodiment. a distinct RNA sequence is one that results in a different sequence (primary structure) in the resulting modified guide.

In some embodiments, the methods provided herein may occur ex vivo unless otherwise apparent.

Applicants have found, both in Example 9 and in Example 24, is that the Helical Domain 2 (HD2) of Sp Cas9 may be deleted. While some activity may be lost, this may only be around 50%; and this truncation may be advantageous. Although relatively small, a modest reduction in the total number of amino acids for Sp Cas9 is seen. This can only help with packaging Cas9 or the coding for Cas9 and guides into a single vector for delivery. In some circumstances a functional but less active Cas9, or relatively active Cas9 is advantageous; for instance if off-target effects are a concern, or when a functional domain is associated with the CRISPR Cas9 complex (e.g., with the Cas9 protein). In place of the portion of Cas9 truncated, Applicants added a linker in Example 9.

Applicants also found, in Example 24, that chimeric three-component enzymes can be created, focusing on the HD2 and surrounding regions of Sp Cas9. To date, work has focused on creating chimeras where the N′ or C′ terminal domains are swapped out of Sp and replaced with corresponding domains from St Cas9, for example providing [N′ terminal Sp Cas9-C′ terminal St Cas9] chimeras. These two-component chimeras are useful but Applicants have now found that chimeric 3-component enzymes are possible and functional.

Accordingly, in an aspect, the present invention provides a CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme, preferably Cas9, wherein the HD2 domain has been truncated. In some embodiments, the truncation is replacement of the HD2 domain (i.e. in its entirety). In some embodiments, the truncation is replacement of the HD2 domain or truncated portion thereof with a linker, preferably a GlySer or other flexible linker, or a rigid linker such as alpha-helical linkers (Ala(GluAlaAlaAlaLys)Ala) (SEQ ID NO: 2). A suitable example of an HD2 domain (in this instance from Sp Cas9) is provided in Example 9 and examples of truncated sequences lacking said HD2 domain are also provided for guidance.

In some embodiments, the CRISPR enzyme is a Cas9 ortholog of a genus belonging to the group consisting of Corynebacter, Sutterella, Legionella, Treponema, Filifactor, Eubacterium, Streptococcus, Lactobacillus, Mycoplasma, Bacteroides, Flaviivola, Flavobacterium, Sphaerochaeta, Azospirillum, Gluconacetobacter, Neisseria, Roseburia, Parvibaculum, Staphylococcus, Nitratifractor, Mycoplasma and Campylobacter, wherein the Cas comprises a helical domain 2 truncation.

In some embodiments, the helical domain 2 truncation is substituted with one or more sets of flexible glycine-serine (GlyGlyGlySer) (SEQ ID NO: 1) or rigid alpha-helical linkers (Ala(GluAlaAlaAlaLys)Ala) in groups of 1, 3, 6, 9, or 12 repeats (SEQ ID NOS 2-6, respectively) to replace helical domain 2. This may provide potential structural stabilization and/or aiding of retaining Cas9:sgRNA specificity.

Accordingly, in another aspect, the present invention provides a chimeric 3-component CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme, preferably Cas9. The chimeric 3-component enzyme preferably comprises N′ and C′ terminal components from a first CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme, for example Sp Cas9, and an internal component from a different enzyme, i.e. a second CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme. The second CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme is typically an ortholog of the first CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme. In some embodiments, the second CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme may be any of the orthologs described herein. In some embodiments, the second CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme is Sa. In some embodiments, the second CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme is an St enzyme. In some embodiments, the second CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme is an St3 enzyme.

The internal component of the second CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme does not comprise any amino acids that would be at, or within, 2 or 3 amino acids from the N′ or C′ terminal ends of the functional wild type second CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme (including any post-transcriptional processing). A minimal distance from the N′ or C′ terminal ends of functional wild type second CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme would ideally be 5 to 10 amino acids, in some embodiments.

The components of the first CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme or the second CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme may, in some embodiments, comprise at least one domain or may span the boundaries between two or more domains. Examples of this can be seen in Example 24 and FIG. 86B where the components swapped in an out of the Sp Cas9 (being the first CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme) span the boundaries of the various domains identified in FIG. 86A. In some embodiments, one or more full domains are preferred. In some embodiments, one or more partial domains are preferred. In some embodiments, the Rec lobe is fully or partially swapped out, so that the internal component from a second CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme comprises a full or partial Rec lobe. As such, the N′ and C′ terminal components from a first CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme would lack the Rec lobe.

In some embodiments, the internal component of the second CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme is the HD2 domain.

In some embodiments, the internal component of the second CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme replaces one or more corresponding components in the first CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme. In some embodiments, HD2 domain of the first CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme is truncated or replaced entirely. The truncation may be by at least 20%, more preferably by at least 30%, more preferably by at least 40%, more preferably by at least 50%, more preferably by at least 60%, more preferably by at least 70%, more preferably by at least 70%, more preferably by at least 80%, more preferably by at least 90%, more preferably by at least 95%, more preferably by at least 98%, and more preferably by at least 99%. As mentioned above, a suitable example of an HD2 domain (in this instance from Sp Cas9) is provided in Example 9 and examples of truncated sequences lacking said HD2 domain are also provided for guidance. In some embodiments, the components may be only portions of domains, for example a preferred N′ terminal component is amino acids 1-10 of Sp which is only part of the RuvCI domain in Sp.

In some embodiments, the internal component from the first CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme is replaced by an internal component from the second CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme. The two said internal components may be the same (i.e. correspond to one another between orthologs, comparable by sequence alignment for instance) or different.

In some embodiments, the chimeric 3-component enzyme comprises N′ and C′ terminal components from Sp Cas9, and internal domains from Sa or St3. This provides Sp-St3-Sp or Sp-Sa-Sp chimeric 3 component enzymes (in the N′ to C′ direction).

In some embodiments, the N′ terminal component of the first CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme is Sp 1-10 (amino acids 1-10 of Sp Cas 9). In some embodiments, the N′ terminal component of the first CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme is Sp 1-189. In some embodiments, the N′ terminal component of the first CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme is Sp 1-299.

In some embodiments, the C′ terminal component of the first CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme is Sp 729-1404. In some embodiments, the C′ terminal component of the first CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme is Sp 190-1404. In some embodiments, the C′ terminal component of the first CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme is Sp 328-1404.

In some embodiments, the internal component of the second CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme is St3 87-712. In some embodiments, the internal component of the second CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme is St3 174-712. In some embodiments, the internal component of the second CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme is St3 87-173. In some embodiments, the internal component of the second CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme is St3 174-311. In some embodiments, the internal component of the second CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme is St3 312-712. Thus, in some embodiments, suitable lower range points for the internal component of the second CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme is St3 87, or 174, or 312. Also, in some embodiments, suitable upper range points for the internal component of the second CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme is St3 712, or 172/173, or 311. Any of these combinations are preferred, except where the upper and lower end points are adjacent each other or at least within 10 amino acids.

In some embodiments, the internal component of the second CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme is Sa 125-200. In some embodiments, the internal component of the second CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme is Sa 125-200 and the N′ terminal component of the first CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme is Sp 1-189 and the C′ terminal component of the first CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme is Sp 328-1404.

Some variation on these boundaries (except where the amino acid is the very first or very last of the wildtype) is envisaged, bearing in mind the requirement above regarding distances from the ends. Suitable ranges of these boundaries would be in the region of 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 8, 10 15 or 20 amino acids.

It will be appreciated that the chimeric 3-component CRISPR enzyme or Cas9 enzyme is functional and preferably has at least at least 20%, more preferably at least 30%, more preferably at least 40%, more preferably at least 50%, more preferably at least 60%, more preferably at least 70%, more preferably at least 70%, more preferably at least 80%, more preferably at least 90%, more preferably at least 95%, more preferably at least 98%, and more preferably at least 99% or more preferably 100% or more of the activity of the wildtype enzyme (an enzyme not modified as herein discussed).

Hybrid guides are preferred for use with the chimeric 3-component CRISPR enzyme or Cas9 enzyme, in some embodiments. A hybrid guides comprises a backbone and a targeting sequence. The backbone comprises the tracr RNA scaffold (tracr mate and tracr sequence) and the targeting sequence comprises the guide (spacer) sequence, of approx. 20 nts for DNA targeting. The backbone may correspond to that from an endogenous a guide from the same species as the first CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme or the backbone may correspond to that from an endogenous a guide from the same species as the second CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme. The targeting sequence may correspond to that from an endogenous a guide from the same species as the first CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme or the targeting sequence may correspond to that from an endogenous a guide from the same species as the second CRISPR enzyme or Cas enzyme.

Exemplary arrangement for truncations and chimeric 3-component CRISPR enzyme or Cas9 enzymes are shown in FIGS. 27 A and B, with reference to wt Sp Cas9, except for the last chimera in FIG. 27B which is a two-component chimera. The truncation shown in the third arrangement in FIG. 27A is preferred as this is an HD2 truncation and wherein the HDS region has been replaced by a linker. Suitable linkers are Gly Ser linkers as discussed herein or alpha-helical linkers (Ala(GluAlaAlaAlaLys)Ala) (SEQ ID NO: 2).

The CRISPR-Cas enzymes described herein are preferably type II CRISPR-Cas enzymes. In some embodiments it may be preferred in a CRISPR complex that the tracr sequence has one or more hairpins and is 30 or more nucleotides in length, 40 or more nucleotides in length, or 50 or more nucleotides in length; the guide sequence is between 10 to 30 nucleotides in length, the CRISPR/Cas enzyme is a Type II Cas9 enzyme.

With respect to general information on CRISPR-Cas Systems, components thereof, and delivery of such components, including methods, materials, delivery vehicles, vectors, particles, AAV, and making and using thereof, including as to amounts and formulations, all useful in the practice of the instant invention, reference is made to: U.S. Pat. Nos. 8,697,359, 8,771,945, 8,795,965, 8,865,406, 8,871,445, 8,889,356, 8,889,418 and 8,895,308; US Patent Publications US 2014-0310830 (U.S. application Ser. No. 14/105,031), US 2014-0287938 A1 (U.S. application Ser. No. 14/213,991), US 2014-0273234 A1 (U.S. application Ser. No. 14/293,674), US2014-0273232 A1 (U.S. application Ser. No. 14/290,575), US 2014-0273231 (U.S. application Ser. No. 14/259,420), US 2014-0256046 A1 (U.S. application Ser. No. 14/226,274), US 2014-0248702 A1 (U.S. application Ser. No. 14/258,458), US 2014-0242700 A1 (U.S. application Ser. No. 14/222,930), US 2014-0242699 A1 (U.S. application Ser. No. 14/183,512), US 2014-0242664 A1 (U.S. application Ser. No. 14/104,990), US 2014-0234972 A1 (U.S. application Ser. No. 14/183,471), US 2014-0227787 A1 (U.S. application Ser. No. 14/256,912), US 2014-0189896 A1 (U.S. application Ser. No. 14/105,035), US 2014-0186958 (U.S. application Ser. No. 14/105,017), US 2014-0186919 A1 (U.S. application Ser. No. 14/104,977), US 2014-0186843 A1 (U.S. application Ser. No. 14/104,900), US 2014-0179770 A1 (U.S. application Ser. No. 14/104,837) and US 2014-0179006 A1 (U.S. application Ser. No. 14/183,486), US 2014-0170753 (U.S. application Ser. No. 14/183,429); European Patent Applications EP 2 771 468 (EP13818570.7), EP 2 764 103 (EP13824232.6), and EP 2 784 162 (EP14170383.5); and PCT Patent Publications WO 2014/093661 (PCT/US2013/074743), WO 2014/093694 (PCT/US2013/074790), WO 2014/093595 (PCT/US2013/074611), WO 2014/093718 (PCT/US2013/074825), WO 2014/093709 (PCT/US2013/074812), WO 2014/093622 (PCT/US2013/074667), WO 2014/093635 (PCT/US2013/074691), WO 2014/093655 (PCT/US2013/074736), WO 2014/093712 (PCT/US2013/074819), WO2014/093701 (PCT/US2013/074800), and WO2014/018423 (PCT/US2013/051418). Reference is also made to U.S. provisional patent applications 61/758,468; 61/802,174; 61/806,375; 61/814,263; 61/819,803 and 61/828,130, filed on Jan. 30, 2013; Mar. 15, 2013; Mar. 28, 2013; Apr. 20, 2013; May 6, 2013 and May 28, 2013 respectively. Reference is also made to U.S. provisional patent application 61/836,123, filed on Jun. 17, 2013. Reference is additionally made to U.S. provisional patent applications 61/835,931, 61/835,936, 61/836,127, 61/836,101, 61/836,080 and 61/835,973, each filed Jun. 17, 2013. Further reference is made to U.S. provisional patent applications 61/862,468 and 61/862,355 filed on Aug. 5, 2013; 61/871,301 filed on Aug. 28, 2013; 61/960,777 filed on Sep. 25, 2013 and 61/961,980 filed on Oct. 28, 2013. Reference is yet further made to: PCT Patent applications Nos: PCT/US2014/041803, PCT/US2014/041800, PCT/US2014/041809, PCT/US2014/041804 and PCT/US2014/041806, each filed Jun. 10, 2014 6/10/14; PCT/US2014/041808 filed Jun. 11, 2014; and PCT/US2014/62558 filed Oct. 28, 2014, and U.S. Provisional Patent Applications Ser. Nos. 61/915,150, 61/915,301, 61/915,267 and 61/915,260, each filed Dec. 12, 2013; 61/757,972 and 61/768,959, filed on Jan. 29, 2013 and Feb. 25, 2013; 61/835,936, 61/836,127, 61/836,101, 61/836,080, 61/835,973, and 61/835,931, filed Jun. 17, 2013; 62/010,888 and 62/010,879, both filed Jun. 11, 2014; 62/010,329 and 62/010,441, each filed Jun. 10, 2014; 61/939,228 and 61/939,242, each filed Feb. 12, 2014; 61/980,012, filed Apr. 15,2014; 62/038,358, filed Aug. 17, 2014; 62/054,490, 62/055,484, 62/055,460 and 62/055,487, each filed Sep. 25, 2014; and 62/069,243, filed Oct. 27, 2014. Reference is also made to U.S. provisional patent applications Nos. 62/055,484, 62/055,460, and 62/055,487, filed Sep. 25, 2014; U.S. provisional patent application 61/980,012, filed Apr. 15, 2014; and U.S. provisional patent application 61/939,242 filed Feb. 12, 2014. Reference is made to PCT application designating, inter alia, the United States, application No. PCT/US14/41806, filed Jun. 10, 2014. Reference is made to U.S. provisional patent application 61/930,214 filed on Jan. 22, 2014. Reference is made to U.S. provisional patent applications 61/915,251; 61/915,260 and 61/915,267, each filed on Dec. 12, 2013. Reference is made to US provisional patent application U.S. Ser. No. 61/980,012 filed Apr. 15, 2014. Reference is made to PCT application designating, inter alia, the United States, application No. PCT/US14/41806, filed Jun. 10, 2014. Reference is made to U.S. provisional patent application 61/930,214 filed on Jan. 22, 2014. Reference is made to U.S. provisional patent applications 61/915,251; 61/915,260 and 61/915,267, each filed on Dec. 12, 2013. Each of these patents, patent publications, and applications, and all documents cited therein or during their prosecution (“appln cited documents”) and all documents cited or referenced in the appln cited documents, together with any instructions, descriptions, product specifications, and product sheets for any products mentioned therein or in any document therein and incorporated by reference herein, are hereby incorporated herein by reference, and may be employed in the practice of the invention. All documents (e.g., these patents, patent publications and applications and the appln cited documents) are incorporated herein by reference to the same extent as if each individual document was specifically and individually indicated to be incorporated by reference.

Also with respect to general information on CRISPR-Cas Systems, mention is made of the following (also hereby incorporated herein by reference):

-   Multiplex genome engineering using CRISPR/Cas systems. Cong, L.,     Ran, F. A., Cox, D., Lin, S., Barretto, R., Habib, N., Hsu, P. D.,     Wu, X., Jiang, W., Marraffini, L.A., & Zhang, F. Science February     15; 339(6121):819-23 (2013); -   RNA-guided editing of bacterial genomes using CRISPR-Cas systems.     Jiang W., Bikard D., Cox D., Zhang F, Marraffini L A. Nat Biotechnol     March; 31(3):233-9 (2013); -   One-Step Generation of Mice Carrying Mutations in Multiple Genes by     CRISPR/Cas-Mediated Genome Engineering. Wang H., Yang H., Shivalila     C S., Dawlaty M M., Cheng A W., Zhang F., Jaenisch R. Cell May 9;     153(4):910-8 (2013); -   Optical control of mammalian endogenous transcription and epigenetic     states. Konermann S, Brigham M D, Trevino A E, Hsu P D, Heidenreich     M, Cong L, Platt R J, Scott D A, Church G M, Zhang F. Nature. 2013     Aug. 22; 500(7463):472-6. doi: 10.1038/Nature12466. Epub 2013 Aug.     23; -   Double Nicking by RNA-Guided CRISPR Cas9 for Enhanced Genome Editing     Specificity. Ran, F A., Hsu, P D., Lin, C Y., Gootenberg, J S.,     Konermann, S., Trevino, A E., Scott, D A., Inoue, A., Matoba, S.,     Zhang, Y., & Zhang, F. Cell August 28. pii: S0092-8674(13)01015-5.     (2013); -   DNA targeting specificity of RNA-guided Cas9 nucleases. Hsu, P.,     Scott, D., Weinstein, J., Ran, F A., Konermann, S., Agarwala, V.,     Li, Y., Fine, E., Wu, X., Shalem, O., Cradick, T J., Marraffini, L     A., Bao, G., & Zhang, F. Nat Biotechnol doi:10.1038/nbt.2647 (2013); -   Genome engineering using the CRISPR-Cas9 system. Ran, F A., Hsu, P     D., Wright, J., Agarwala, V., Scott, D A., Zhang, F. Nature     Protocols November; 8(11):2281-308. (2013); -   Genome-Scale CRISPR-Cas9 Knockout Screening in Human Cells. Shalem,     O., Sanjana, N E., Hartenian, E., Shi, X., Scott, D A., Mikkelson,     T., Heckl, D., Ebert, B L., Root, D E., Doench, J G., Zhang, F.     Science December 12. (2013). [Epub ahead of print]; -   Crystal structure of cas9 in complex with guide RNA and target DNA.     Nishimasu, H., Ran, F A., Hsu, P D., Konermann, S., Shehata, S I.,     Dohmae, N., Ishitani, R., Zhang, F., Nureki, O. Cell February 27.     (2014). 156(5):935-49; -   Genome-wide binding of the CRISPR endonuclease Cas9 in mammalian     cells. Wu X., Scott D A., Kriz A J., Chiu A C., Hsu P D., Dadon D     B., Cheng A W., Trevino A E., Konermann S., Chen S., Jaenisch R.,     Zhang F., Sharp P A. Nat Biotechnol. (2014) Apr. 20. doi:     10.1038/nbt.2889, -   CRISPR-Cas9 Knockin Mice for Genome Editing and Cancer Modeling,     Platt et al., Cell 159(2): 440-455 (2014) DOI:     10.1016/j.cell.2014.09.014, -   Development and Applications of CRISPR-Cas9 for Genome Engineering,     Hsu et al, Cell 157, 1262-1278 (Jun. 5, 2014) (Hsu 2014), -   Genetic screens in human cells using the CRISPR Cas9 system, Wang et     al., Science. 2014 Jan. 3; 343(6166): 80-84.     doi:10.1126/science.1246981, -   Rational design of highly active sgRNAs for CRISPR-Cas9-mediated     gene inactivation, Doench et al., Nature Biotechnology published     online 3 Sep. 2014; doi:10.1038/nbt.3026, and -   In vivo interrogation of gene function in the mammalian brain using     CRISPR-Cas9, Swiech et al, Nature Biotechnology; published online 19     Oct. 2014; doi:10.1038/nbt.3055.     each of which is incorporated herein by reference, and discussed     briefly below:

Cong et al. engineered type II CRISPR/Cas systems for use in eukaryotic cells based on both Streptococcus thermophilus Cas9 and also Streptococcus pyogenes Cas9 and demonstrated that Cas9 nucleases can be directed by short RNAs to induce precise cleavage of DNA in human and mouse cells. Their study further showed that Cas9 as converted into a nicking enzyme can be used to facilitate homology-directed repair in eukaryotic cells with minimal mutagenic activity. Additionally, their study demonstrated that multiple guide sequences can be encoded into a single CRISPR array to enable simultaneous editing of several at endogenous genomic loci sites within the mammalian genome, demonstrating easy programmability and wide applicability of the RNA-guided nuclease technology. This ability to use RNA to program sequence specific DNA cleavage in cells defined a new class of genome engineering tools. These studies further showed that other CRISPR loci are likely to be transplantable into mammalian cells and can also mediate mammalian genome cleavage. Importantly, it can be envisaged that several aspects of the CRISPR/Cas system can be further improved to increase its efficiency and versatility.

Jiang et al. used the clustered, regularly interspaced, short palindromic repeats (CRISPR)-associated Cas9 endonuclease complexed with dual-RNAs to introduce precise mutations in the genomes of Streptococcus pneumoniae and Escherichia coli. The approach relied on dual-RNA:Cas9-directed cleavage at the targeted genomic site to kill unmutated cells and circumvents the need for selectable markers or counter-selection systems. The study reported reprogramming dual-RNA:Cas9 specificity by changing the sequence of short CRISPR RNA (crRNA) to make single- and multinucleotide changes carried on editing templates. The study showed that simultaneous use of two crRNAs enabled multiplex mutagenesis. Furthermore, when the approach was used in combination with recombineering, in S. pneumoniae, nearly 100% of cells that were recovered using the described approach contained the desired mutation, and in E. coli, 65% that were recovered contained the mutation.

Konermann et al. addressed the need in the art for versatile and robust technologies that enable optical and chemical modulation of DNA-binding domains based CRISPR Cas9 enzyme and also Transcriptional Activator Like Effectors

Cas9 nuclease from the microbial CRISPR-Cas system is targeted to specific genomic loci by a 20 nt guide sequence, which can tolerate certain mismatches to the DNA target and thereby promote undesired off-target mutagenesis. To address this, Ran et al. described an approach that combined a Cas9 nickase mutant with paired guide RNAs to introduce targeted double-strand breaks. Because individual nicks in the genome are repaired with high fidelity, simultaneous nicking via appropriately offset guide RNAs is required for double-stranded breaks and extends the number of specifically recognized bases for target cleavage. The authors demonstrated that using paired nicking can reduce off-target activity by 50- to 1,500-fold in cell lines and to facilitate gene knockout in mouse zygotes without sacrificing on-target cleavage efficiency. This versatile strategy enables a wide variety of genome editing applications that require high specificity.

Hsu et al. characterized SpCas9 targeting specificity in human cells to inform the selection of target sites and avoid off-target effects. The study evaluated >700 guide RNA variants and SpCas9-induced indel mutation levels at >100 predicted genomic off-target loci in 293T and 293FT cells. The authors reported that SpCas9 tolerates mismatches between guide RNA and target DNA at different positions in a sequence-dependent manner, sensitive to the number, position and distribution of mismatches. The authors further showed that SpCas9-mediated cleavage is unaffected by DNA methylation and that the dosage of SpCas9 and sgRNA can be titrated to minimize off-target modification. Additionally, to facilitate mammalian genome engineering applications, the authors reported providing a web-based software tool to guide the selection and validation of target sequences as well as off-target analyses.

Ran et al. described a set of tools for Cas9-mediated genome editing via non-homologous end joining (NHEJ) or homology-directed repair (HDR) in mammalian cells, as well as generation of modified cell lines for downstream functional studies. To minimize off-target cleavage, the authors further described a double-nicking strategy using the Cas9 nickase mutant with paired guide RNAs. The protocol provided by the authors experimentally derived guidelines for the selection of target sites, evaluation of cleavage efficiency and analysis of off-target activity. The studies showed that beginning with target design, gene modifications can be achieved within as little as 1-2 weeks, and modified clonal cell lines can be derived within 2-3 weeks.

Shalem et al. described a new way to interrogate gene function on a genome-wide scale. Their studies showed that delivery of a genome-scale CRISPR-Cas9 knockout (GeCKO) library targeted 18,080 genes with 64,751 unique guide sequences enabled both negative and positive selection screening in human cells. First, the authors showed use of the GeCKO library to identify genes essential for cell viability in cancer and pluripotent stem cells. Next, in a melanoma model, the authors screened for genes whose loss is involved in resistance to vemurafenib, a therapeutic that inhibits mutant protein kinase BRAF. Their studies showed that the highest-ranking candidates included previously validated genes NF1 and MED12 as well as novel hits NF2, CUL3, TADA2B, and TADA1. The authors observed a high level of consistency between independent guide RNAs targeting the same gene and a high rate of hit confirmation, and thus demonstrated the promise of genome-scale screening with Cas9.

Nishimasu et al. reported the crystal structure of Streptococcus pyogenes Cas9 in complex with sgRNA and its target DNA at 2.5 A° resolution. The structure revealed a bilobed architecture composed of target recognition and nuclease lobes, accommodating the sgRNA:DNA heteroduplex in a positively charged groove at their interface. Whereas the recognition lobe is essential for binding sgRNA and DNA, the nuclease lobe contains the HNH and RuvC nuclease domains, which are properly positioned for cleavage of the complementary and non-complementary strands of the target DNA, respectively. The nuclease lobe also contains a carboxyl-terminal domain responsible for the interaction with the protospacer adjacent motif (PAM). This high-resolution structure and accompanying functional analyses have revealed the molecular mechanism of RNA-guided DNA targeting by Cas9, thus paving the way for the rational design of new, versatile genome-editing technologies.

Wu et al. mapped genome-wide binding sites of a catalytically inactive Cas9 (dCas9) from Streptococcus pyogenes loaded with single guide RNAs (sgRNAs) in mouse embryonic stem cells (mESCs). The authors showed that each of the four sgRNAs tested targets dCas9 to between tens and thousands of genomic sites, frequently characterized by a 5-nucleotide seed region in the sgRNA and an NGG protospacer adjacent motif (PAM). Chromatin inaccessibility decreases dCas9 binding to other sites with matching seed sequences; thus 70% of off-target sites are associated with genes. The authors showed that targeted sequencing of 295 dCas9 binding sites in mESCs transfected with catalytically active Cas9 identified only one site mutated above background levels. The authors proposed a two-state model for Cas9 binding and cleavage, in which a seed match triggers binding but extensive pairing with target DNA is required for cleavage.

Hsu 2014 is a review article that discusses generally CRISPR-Cas9 history from yogurt to genome editing, including genetic screening of cells, that is in the information, data and findings of the applications in the lineage of this specification filed prior to Jun. 5, 2014. The general teachings of Hsu 2014 do not involve the specific models, animals of the instant specification.

Mention is also made of Tsai et al, “Dimeric CRISPR RNA-guided FokI nucleases for highly specific genome editing,” Nature Biotechnology 32(6): 569-77 (2014) which is not believed to be prior art to the instant invention or application, but which may be considered in the practice of the instant invention.

In general, the CRISPR-Cas or CRISPR system is as used in the foregoing documents, such as WO 2014/093622 (PCT/US2013/074667) and refers collectively to transcripts and other elements involved in the expression of or directing the activity of CRISPR-associated (“Cas”) genes, including sequences encoding a Cas gene, a tracr (trans-activating CRISPR) sequence (e.g. tracrRNA or an active partial tracrRNA), a tracr-mate sequence (encompassing a “direct repeat” and a tracrRNA-processed partial direct repeat in the context of an endogenous CRISPR system), a guide sequence (also referred to as a “spacer” in the context of an endogenous CRISPR system), or “RNA(s)” as that term is herein used (e.g., RNA(s) to guide Cas9, e.g. CRISPR RNA and transactivating (tracr) RNA or a single guide RNA (sgRNA) (chimeric RNA)) or other sequences and transcripts from a CRISPR locus. In general, a CRISPR system is characterized by elements that promote the formation of a CRISPR complex at the site of a target sequence (also referred to as a protospacer in the context of an endogenous CRISPR system). In the context of formation of a CRISPR complex, “target sequence” refers to a sequence to which a guide sequence is designed to have complementarity, where hybridization between a target sequence and a guide sequence promotes the formation of a CRISPR complex. A target sequence may comprise any polynucleotide, such as DNA or RNA polynucleotides. In some embodiments, a target sequence is located in the nucleus or cytoplasm of a cell. In some embodiments, direct repeats may be identified in silico by searching for repetitive motifs that fulfill any or all of the following criteria: 1. found in a 2 Kb window of genomic sequence flanking the type II CRISPR locus; 2. span from 20 to 50 bp; and 3. interspaced by 20 to 50 bp. In some embodiments, 2 of these criteria may be used, for instance 1 and 2, 2 and 3, or 1 and 3. In some embodiments, all 3 criteria may be used.

The terms “polynucleotide”, “nucleotide”, “nucleotide sequence”, “nucleic acid” and “oligonucleotide” are used interchangeably. They refer to a polymeric form of nucleotides of any length, either deoxyribonucleotides or ribonucleotides, or analogs thereof. Polynucleotides may have any three dimensional structure, and may perform any function, known or unknown. The following are non limiting examples of polynucleotides: coding or non-coding regions of a gene or gene fragment, loci (locus) defined from linkage analysis, exons, introns, messenger RNA (mRNA), transfer RNA, ribosomal RNA, short interfering RNA (siRNA), short-hairpin RNA (shRNA), micro-RNA (miRNA), ribozymes, cDNA, recombinant polynucleotides, branched polynucleotides, plasmids, vectors, isolated DNA of any sequence, isolated RNA of any sequence, nucleic acid probes, and primers. A polynucleotide may comprise one or more modified nucleotides, such as methylated nucleotides and nucleotide analogs. If present, modifications to the nucleotide structure may be imparted before or after assembly of the polymer. The sequence of nucleotides may be interrupted by non nucleotide components. A polynucleotide may be further modified after polymerization, such as by conjugation with a labeling component.

In aspects of the invention the terms “chimeric RNA”, “chimeric guide RNA”, “guide RNA”, “single guide RNA” and “synthetic guide RNA” are used interchangeably and refer to the polynucleotide sequence comprising the guide sequence, the tracr sequence and the tracr mate sequence. The term “guide sequence” refers to the about 20 bp sequence within the guide RNA that specifies the target site and may be used interchangeably with the terms “guide” or “spacer”. The term “tracr mate sequence” may also be used interchangeably with the term “direct repeat(s)”. An exemplary CRISPR-Cas system is illustrated in FIG. 1 .

As used herein the term “wild type” is a term of the art understood by skilled persons and means the typical form of an organism, strain, gene or characteristic as it occurs in nature as distinguished from mutant or variant forms.

As used herein the term “variant” should be taken to mean the exhibition of qualities that have a pattern that deviates from what occurs in nature.

The terms “non-naturally occurring” or “engineered” are used interchangeably and indicate the involvement of the hand of man. The terms, when referring to nucleic acid molecules or polypeptides mean that the nucleic acid molecule or the polypeptide is at least substantially free from at least one other component with which they are naturally associated in nature and as found in nature.

“Complementarity” refers to the ability of a nucleic acid to form hydrogen bond(s) with another nucleic acid sequence by either traditional Watson-Crick or other non-traditional types. A percent complementarity indicates the percentage of residues in a nucleic acid molecule which can form hydrogen bonds (e.g., Watson-Crick base pairing) with a second nucleic acid sequence (e.g., 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 out of 10 being 50%, 60%, 70%, 80%, 90%, and 100% complementary). “Perfectly complementary” means that all the contiguous residues of a nucleic acid sequence will hydrogen bond with the same number of contiguous residues in a second nucleic acid sequence. “Substantially complementary” as used herein refers to a degree of complementarity that is at least 60%, 65%, 70%, 75%, 80%, 85%, 90%, 95%, 97%, 98%, 99%, or 100% over a region of 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 30, 35, 40, 45, 50, or more nucleotides, or refers to two nucleic acids that hybridize under stringent conditions.

As used herein, “stringent conditions” for hybridization refer to conditions under which a nucleic acid having complementarity to a target sequence predominantly hybridizes with the target sequence, and substantially does not hybridize to non-target sequences. Stringent conditions are generally sequence-dependent, and vary depending on a number of factors. In general, the longer the sequence, the higher the temperature at which the sequence specifically hybridizes to its target sequence. Non-limiting examples of stringent conditions are described in detail in Tijssen (1993), Laboratory Techniques In Biochemistry And Molecular Biology-Hybridization With Nucleic Acid Probes Part I, Second Chapter “Overview of principles of hybridization and the strategy of nucleic acid probe assay”, Elsevier, N.Y.

“Hybridization” refers to a reaction in which one or more polynucleotides react to form a complex that is stabilized via hydrogen bonding between the bases of the nucleotide residues. The hydrogen bonding may occur by Watson Crick base pairing, Hoogstein binding, or in any other sequence specific manner. The complex may comprise two strands forming a duplex structure, three or more strands forming a multi stranded complex, a single self hybridizing strand, or any combination of these. A hybridization reaction may constitute a step in a more extensive process, such as the initiation of PCR, or the cleavage of a polynucleotide by an enzyme. A sequence capable of hybridizing with a given sequence is referred to as the “complement” of the given sequence.

As used herein, “expression” refers to the process by which a polynucleotide is transcribed from a DNA template (such as into and mRNA or other RNA transcript) and/or the process by which a transcribed mRNA is subsequently translated into peptides, polypeptides, or proteins. Transcripts and encoded polypeptides may be collectively referred to as “gene product.” If the polynucleotide is derived from genomic DNA, expression may include splicing of the mRNA in a eukaryotic cell.

The terms “polypeptide”, “peptide” and “protein” are used interchangeably herein to refer to polymers of amino acids of any length. The polymer may be linear or branched, it may comprise modified amino acids, and it may be interrupted by non amino acids. The terms also encompass an amino acid polymer that has been modified; for example, disulfide bond formation, glycosylation, lipidation, acetylation, phosphorylation, or any other manipulation, such as conjugation with a labeling component. As used herein the term “amino acid” includes natural and/or unnatural or synthetic amino acids, including glycine and both the D or L optical isomers, and amino acid analogs and peptidomimetics.

The terms “subject,” “individual,” and “patient” are used interchangeably herein to refer to a vertebrate, preferably a mammal, more preferably a human. Mammals include, but are not limited to, murines, simians, humans, farm animals, sport animals, and pets. Tissues, cells and their progeny of a biological entity obtained in vivo or cultured in vitro are also encompassed.

The terms “therapeutic agent”, “therapeutic capable agent” or “treatment agent” are used interchangeably and refer to a molecule or compound that confers some beneficial effect upon administration to a subject. The beneficial effect includes enablement of diagnostic determinations; amelioration of a disease, symptom, disorder, or pathological condition; reducing or preventing the onset of a disease, symptom, disorder or condition; and generally counteracting a disease, symptom, disorder or pathological condition.

As used herein, “treatment” or “treating,” or “palliating” or “ameliorating” are used interchangeably. These terms refer to an approach for obtaining beneficial or desired results including but not limited to a therapeutic benefit and/or a prophylactic benefit. By therapeutic benefit is meant any therapeutically relevant improvement in or effect on one or more diseases, conditions, or symptoms under treatment. For prophylactic benefit, the compositions may be administered to a subject at risk of developing a particular disease, condition, or symptom, or to a subject reporting one or more of the physiological symptoms of a disease, even though the disease, condition, or symptom may not have yet been manifested.

The term “effective amount” or “therapeutically effective amount” refers to the amount of an agent that is sufficient to effect beneficial or desired results. The therapeutically effective amount may vary depending upon one or more of: the subject and disease condition being treated, the weight and age of the subject, the severity of the disease condition, the manner of administration and the like, which can readily be determined by one of ordinary skill in the art. The term also applies to a dose that will provide an image for detection by any one of the imaging methods described herein. The specific dose may vary depending on one or more of: the particular agent chosen, the dosing regimen to be followed, whether it is administered in combination with other compounds, timing of administration, the tissue to be imaged, and the physical delivery system in which it is carried.

The practice of the present invention employs, unless otherwise indicated, conventional techniques of immunology, biochemistry, chemistry, molecular biology, microbiology, cell biology, genomics and recombinant DNA, which are within the skill of the art. See Sambrook, Fritsch and Maniatis, MOLECULAR CLONING: A LABORATORY MANUAL, 2nd edition (1989); CURRENT PROTOCOLS IN MOLECULAR BIOLOGY (F. M. Ausubel, et al. eds., (1987)); the series METHODS IN ENZYMOLOGY (Academic Press, Inc.): PCR 2: A PRACTICAL APPROACH (M. J. MacPherson, B. D. Hames and G. R. Taylor eds. (1995)), Harlow and Lane, eds. (1988) ANTIBODIES, A LABORATORY MANUAL, and ANIMAL CELL CULTURE (R.I. Freshney, ed. (1987)).

Several aspects of the invention relate to vector systems comprising one or more vectors, or vectors as such. Vectors can be designed for expression of CRISPR transcripts (e.g. nucleic acid transcripts, proteins, or enzymes) in prokaryotic or eukaryotic cells. For example, CRISPR transcripts can be expressed in bacterial cells such as Escherichia coli, insect cells (using baculovirus expression vectors), yeast cells, or mammalian cells. Suitable host cells are discussed further in Goeddel, GENE EXPRESSION TECHNOLOGY: METHODS IN ENZYMOLOGY 185, Academic Press, San Diego, Calif. (1990). Alternatively, the recombinant expression vector can be transcribed and translated in vitro, for example using T7 promoter regulatory sequences and T7 polymerase.

Vectors may be introduced and propagated in a prokaryote. In some embodiments, a prokaryote is used to amplify copies of a vector to be introduced into a eukaryotic cell or as an intermediate vector in the production of a vector to be introduced into a eukaryotic cell (e.g. amplifying a plasmid as part of a viral vector packaging system). In some embodiments, a prokaryote is used to amplify copies of a vector and express one or more nucleic acids, such as to provide a source of one or more proteins for delivery to a host cell or host organism. Expression of proteins in prokaryotes is most often carried out in Escherichia coli with vectors containing constitutive or inducible promoters directing the expression of either fusion or non-fusion proteins. Fusion vectors add a number of amino acids to a protein encoded therein, such as to the amino terminus of the recombinant protein. Such fusion vectors may serve one or more purposes, such as: (i) to increase expression of recombinant protein; (ii) to increase the solubility of the recombinant protein; and (iii) to aid in the purification of the recombinant protein by acting as a ligand in affinity purification. Often, in fusion expression vectors, a proteolytic cleavage site is introduced at the junction of the fusion moiety and the recombinant protein to enable separation of the recombinant protein from the fusion moiety subsequent to purification of the fusion protein. Such enzymes, and their cognate recognition sequences, include Factor Xa, thrombin and enterokinase. Example fusion expression vectors include pGEX (Pharmacia Biotech Inc; Smith and Johnson, 1988. Gene 67: 31-40), pMAL (New England Biolabs, Beverly, Mass.) and pRIT5 (Pharmacia, Piscataway, N.J.) that fuse glutathione S-transferase (GST), maltose E binding protein, or protein A, respectively, to the target recombinant protein.

Examples of suitable inducible non-fusion E. coli expression vectors include pTrc (Amrann et al., (1988) Gene 69:301-315) and pET lid (Studier et al., GENE EXPRESSION TECHNOLOGY: METHODS IN ENZYMOLOGY 185, Academic Press, San Diego, Calif. (1990) 60-89).

In some embodiments, a vector is a yeast expression vector. Examples of vectors for expression in yeast Saccharomyces cerivisae include pYepSecl (Baldari, et al., 1987. EMBO J 6: 229-234), pMFa (Kuijan and Herskowitz, 1982. Cell 30: 933-943), pJRY88 (Schultz et al., 1987. Gene 54: 113-123), pYES2 (Invitrogen Corporation, San Diego, Calif.), and picZ (InVitrogen Corp, San Diego, Calif.).

In some embodiments, a vector drives protein expression in insect cells using baculovirus expression vectors. Baculovirus vectors available for expression of proteins in cultured insect cells (e.g., SF9 cells) include the pAc series (Smith, et al., 1983. Mol. Cell. Biol. 3: 2156-2165) and the pVL series (Lucklow and Summers, 1989. Virology 170: 31-39).

In some embodiments, a vector is capable of driving expression of one or more sequences in mammalian cells using a mammalian expression vector. Examples of mammalian expression vectors include pCDM8 (Seed, 1987. Nature 329: 840) and pMT2PC (Kaufman, et al., 1987. EMBO J. 6: 187-195). When used in mammalian cells, the expression vector's control functions are typically provided by one or more regulatory elements. For example, commonly used promoters are derived from polyoma, adenovirus 2, cytomegalovirus, simian virus 40, and others disclosed herein and known in the art. For other suitable expression systems for both prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells see, e.g., Chapters 16 and 17 of Sambrook, et al., MOLECULAR CLONING: A LABORATORY MANUAL. 2nd ed., Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y., 1989.

In some embodiments, the recombinant mammalian expression vector is capable of directing expression of the nucleic acid preferentially in a particular cell type (e.g., tissue-specific regulatory elements are used to express the nucleic acid). Tissue-specific regulatory elements are known in the art. Non-limiting examples of suitable tissue-specific promoters include the albumin promoter (liver-specific; Pinkert, et al., 1987. Genes Dev. 1: 268-277), lymphoid-specific promoters (Calame and Eaton, 1988. Adv. Immunol. 43: 235-275), in particular promoters of T cell receptors (Winoto and Baltimore, 1989. EMBO J. 8: 729-733) and immunoglobulins (Baneiji, et al., 1983. Cell 33: 729-740; Queen and Baltimore, 1983. Cell 33: 741-748), neuron-specific promoters (e.g., the neurofilament promoter; Byrne and Ruddle, 1989. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 86: 5473-5477), pancreas-specific promoters (Edlund, et al., 1985. Science 230: 912-916), and mammary gland-specific promoters (e.g., milk whey promoter; U.S. Pat. No. 4,873,316 and European Application Publication No. 264,166). Developmentally-regulated promoters are also encompassed, e.g., the murine hox promoters (Kessel and Gruss, 1990. Science 249: 374-379) and the α-fetoprotein promoter (Campes and Tilghman, 1989. Genes Dev. 3: 537-546).

In some embodiments, a regulatory element is operably linked to one or more elements of a CRISPR system so as to drive expression of the one or more elements of the CRISPR system. In general, CRISPRs (Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats), also known as SPIDRs (SPacer Interspersed Direct Repeats), constitute a family of DNA loci that are usually specific to a particular bacterial species. The CRISPR locus comprises a distinct class of interspersed short sequence repeats (SSRs) that were recognized in E. coli (Ishino et al., J. Bacteriol., 169:5429-5433 [1987]; and Nakata et al., J. Bacteriol., 171:3553-3556 [1989]), and associated genes. Similar interspersed SSRs have been identified in Haloferax mediterranei, Streptococcus pyogenes, Anabaena, and Mycobacterium tuberculosis (See, Groenen et al., Mol. Microbiol., 10:1057-1065 [1993]; Hoe et al., Emerg. Infect. Dis., 5:254-263 [1999]; Masepohl et al., Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1307:26-30 [1996]; and Mojica et al., Mol. Microbiol., 17:85-93 [1995]). The CRISPR loci typically differ from other SSRs by the structure of the repeats, which have been termed short regularly spaced repeats (SRSRs) (Janssen et al., OMICS J. Integ. Biol., 6:23-33 [2002]; and Mojica et al., Mol. Microbiol., 36:244-246 [2000]). In general, the repeats are short elements that occur in clusters that are regularly spaced by unique intervening sequences with a substantially constant length (Mojica et al., [2000], supra). Although the repeat sequences are highly conserved between strains, the number of interspersed repeats and the sequences of the spacer regions typically differ from strain to strain (van Embden et al., J. Bacteriol., 182:2393-2401 [2000]). CRISPR loci have been identified in more than 40 prokaryotes (See e.g., Jansen et al., Mol. Microbiol., 43:1565-1575 [2002]; and Mojica et al., [2005]) including, but not limited to Aeropyrum, Pyrobaculum, Sulfolobus, Archaeoglobus, Halocarcula, Methanobacterium, Methanococcus, Methanosarcina, Methanopyrus, Pyrococcus, Picrophilus, Thermoplasma, Corynebacterium, Mycobacterium, Streptomyces, Aquifex, Porphyromonas, Chlorobium, Thermus, Bacillus, Listeria, Staphylococcus, Clostridium, Thermoanaerobacter, Mycoplasma, Fusobacterium, Azarcus, Chromobacterium, Neisseria, Nitrosomonas, Desulfovibrio, Geobacter, Myxococcus, Campylobacter, Wolinella, Acinetobacter, Erwinia, Escherichia, Legionella, Methylococcus, Pasteurella, Photobacterium, Salmonella, Xanthomonas, Yersinia, Treponema, and Thermotoga.

In general, “CRISPR system” refers collectively to transcripts and other elements involved in the expression of or directing the activity of CRISPR-associated (“Cas”) genes, including sequences encoding a Cas gene, a tracr (trans-activating CRISPR) sequence (e.g. tracrRNA or an active partial tracrRNA), a tracr-mate sequence (encompassing a “direct repeat” and a tracrRNA-processed partial direct repeat in the context of an endogenous CRISPR system), a guide sequence (also referred to as a “spacer” in the context of an endogenous CRISPR system), or other sequences and transcripts from a CRISPR locus. In some embodiments, one or more elements of a CRISPR system is derived from a type I, type II, or type III CRISPR system. In some embodiments, one or more elements of a CRISPR system is derived from a particular organism comprising an endogenous CRISPR system, such as Streptococcus pyogenes. In general, a CRISPR system is characterized by elements that promote the formation of a CRISPR complex at the site of a target sequence (also referred to as a protospacer in the context of an endogenous CRISPR system). In the context of formation of a CRISPR complex, “target sequence” refers to a sequence to which a guide sequence is designed to have complementarity, where hybridization between a target sequence and a guide sequence promotes the formation of a CRISPR complex. Full complementarity is not necessarily required, provided there is sufficient complementarity to cause hybridization and promote formation of a CRISPR complex. A target sequence may comprise any polynucleotide, such as DNA or RNA polynucleotides. In some embodiments, a target sequence is located in the nucleus or cytoplasm of a cell. In some embodiments, the target sequence may be within an organelle of a eukaryotic cell, for example, mitochondrion or chloroplast. A sequence or template that may be used for recombination into the targeted locus comprising the target sequences is referred to as an “editing template” or “editing polynucleotide” or “editing sequence”. In aspects of the invention, an exogenous template polynucleotide may be referred to as an editing template. In an aspect of the invention the recombination is homologous recombination.

Typically, in the context of an endogenous CRISPR system, formation of a CRISPR complex (comprising a guide sequence hybridized to a target sequence and complexed with one or more Cas proteins) results in cleavage of one or both strands in or near (e.g. within 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 20, 50, or more base pairs from) the target sequence. Without wishing to be bound by theory, the tracr sequence, which may comprise or consist of all or a portion of a wild-type tracr sequence (e.g. about or more than about 20, 26, 32, 45, 48, 54, 63, 67, 85, or more nucleotides of a wild-type tracr sequence), may also form part of a CRISPR complex, such as by hybridization along at least a portion of the tracr sequence to all or a portion of a tracr mate sequence that is operably linked to the guide sequence. In some embodiments, the tracr sequence has sufficient complementarity to a tracr mate sequence to hybridize and participate in formation of a CRISPR complex. As with the target sequence, it is believed that complete complementarity is not needed, provided there is sufficient to be functional. In some embodiments, the tracr sequence has at least 50%, 60%, 70%, 80%, 90%, 95% or 99% of sequence complementarity along the length of the tracr mate sequence when optimally aligned. In some embodiments, one or more vectors driving expression of one or more elements of a CRISPR system are introduced into a host cell such that expression of the elements of the CRISPR system direct formation of a CRISPR complex at one or more target sites. For example, a Cas enzyme, a guide sequence linked to a tracr-mate sequence, and a tracr sequence could each be operably linked to separate regulatory elements on separate vectors. Alternatively, two or more of the elements expressed from the same or different regulatory elements, may be combined in a single vector, with one or more additional vectors providing any components of the CRISPR system not included in the first vector. CRISPR system elements that are combined in a single vector may be arranged in any suitable orientation, such as one element located 5′ with respect to (“upstream” of) or 3′ with respect to (“downstream” of) a second element. The coding sequence of one element may be located on the same or opposite strand of the coding sequence of a second element, and oriented in the same or opposite direction. In some embodiments, a single promoter drives expression of a transcript encoding a CRISPR enzyme and one or more of the guide sequence, tracr mate sequence (optionally operably linked to the guide sequence), and a tracr sequence embedded within one or more intron sequences (e.g. each in a different intron, two or more in at least one intron, or all in a single intron). In some embodiments, the CRISPR enzyme, guide sequence, tracr mate sequence, and tracr sequence are operably linked to and expressed from the same promoter. Single vector constructs for SpCas9 are illustrated in FIG. 22 .

In some embodiments, a vector comprises one or more insertion sites, such as a restriction endonuclease recognition sequence (also referred to as a “cloning site”). In some embodiments, one or more insertion sites (e.g. about or more than about 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, or more insertion sites) are located upstream and/or downstream of one or more sequence elements of one or more vectors. In some embodiments, a vector comprises an insertion site upstream of a tracr mate sequence, and optionally downstream of a regulatory element operably linked to the tracr mate sequence, such that following insertion of a guide sequence into the insertion site and upon expression the guide sequence directs sequence-specific binding of a CRISPR complex to a target sequence in a eukaryotic cell. In some embodiments, a vector comprises two or more insertion sites, each insertion site being located between two tracr mate sequences so as to allow insertion of a guide sequence at each site. In such an arrangement, the two or more guide sequences may comprise two or more copies of a single guide sequence, two or more different guide sequences, or combinations of these. When multiple different guide sequences are used, a single expression construct may be used to target CRISPR activity to multiple different, corresponding target sequences within a cell. For example, a single vector may comprise about or more than about 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 15, 20, or more guide sequences. In some embodiments, about or more than about 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, or more such guide-sequence-containing vectors may be provided, and optionally delivered to a cell.

In some embodiments, a vector comprises a regulatory element operably linked to an enzyme-coding sequence encoding a CRISPR enzyme, such as a Cas protein. Non-limiting examples of Cas proteins include Cas1, Cas1B, Cas2, Cas3, Cas4, Cas5, Cas6, Cas7, Cas8, Cas9 (also known as Csn1 and Csx12), Cas10, Csy1, Csy2, Csy3, Cse1, Cse2, Csc1, Csc2, Csa5, Csn2, Csm2, Csm3, Csm4, Csm5, Csm6, Cmr1, Cmr3, Cmr4, Cmr5, Cmr6, Csb1, Csb2, Csb3, Csx17, Csx14, Csx10, Csx16, CsaX, Csx3, Csx1, Csx15, Csf1, Csf2, Csf3, Csf4, homologs thereof, or modified versions thereof. These enzymes are known; for example, the amino acid sequence of S. pyogenes Cas9 protein may be found in the SwissProt database under accession number Q99ZW2. In some embodiments, the unmodified CRISPR enzyme has DNA cleavage activity, such as Cas9. In some embodiments the CRISPR enzyme is Cas9, and may be Cas9 from S. pyogenes or S. pneumoniae. In some embodiments, the CRISPR enzyme directs cleavage of one or both strands at the location of a target sequence, such as within the target sequence and/or within the complement of the target sequence. In some embodiments, the CRISPR enzyme directs cleavage of one or both strands within about 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 15, 20, 25, 50, 100, 200, 500, or more base pairs from the first or last nucleotide of a target sequence. In some embodiments, a vector encodes a CRISPR enzyme that is mutated to with respect to a corresponding wild-type enzyme such that the mutated CRISPR enzyme lacks the ability to cleave one or both strands of a target polynucleotide containing a target sequence. For example, an aspartate-to-alanine substitution (D10A) in the RuvC I catalytic domain of Cas9 from S. pyogenes converts Cas9 from a nuclease that cleaves both strands to a nickase (cleaves a single strand). Other examples of mutations that render Cas9 a nickase include, without limitation, H840A, N854A, and N863A. In aspects of the invention, nickases may be used for genome editing via homologous recombination, For example, FIG. 21 shows genome editing via homologous recombination. FIG. 21 (a) shows the schematic of SpCas9 nickase, with D10A mutation in the RuvC I catalytic domain. (b) Schematic representing homologous recombination (HR) at the human EMX1 locus using either sense or antisense single stranded oligonucleotides as repair templates. (c) Sequence of region modified by HR. d, SURVEYOR assay for wildtype (wt) and nickase (D10A) SpCas9-mediated indels at the EMX1 target 1 locus (n=3). Arrows indicate positions of expected fragment sizes.

In some embodiments, a Cas9 nickase may be used in combination with guide sequence(s), e.g., two guide sequences, which target respectively sense and antisense strands of the DNA target. This combination allows both strands to be nicked and used to induce NHEJ. Applicants have demonstrated (data not shown) the efficacy of two nickase targets (i.e., sgRNAs targeted at the same location but to different strands of DNA) in inducing mutagenic NHEJ. A single nickase (Cas9-D10A with a single sgRNA) is unable to induce NHEJ and create indels but Applicants have shown that double nickase (Cas9-D10A and two sgRNAs targeted to different strands at the same location) can do so in human embryonic stem cells (hESCs). The efficiency is about 50% of nuclease (i.e., regular Cas9 without D10 mutation) in hESCs.

As a further example, two or more catalytic domains of Cas9 (RuvC I, RuvC II, and RuvC III) may be mutated to produce a mutated Cas9 substantially lacking all DNA cleavage activity. In some embodiments, a D10A mutation is combined with one or more of H840A, N854A, or N863A mutations to produce a Cas9 enzyme substantially lacking all DNA cleavage activity. In some embodiments, a CRISPR enzyme is considered to substantially lack all DNA cleavage activity when the DNA cleavage activity of the mutated enzyme is less than about 25%, 10%, 5%, 1%, 0.1%, 0.01%, or lower with respect to its non-mutated form. Other mutations may be useful; where the Cas9 or other CRISPR enzyme is from a species other than S. pyogenes, mutations in corresponding amino acids may be made to achieve similar effects.

In some embodiments, an enzyme coding sequence encoding a CRISPR enzyme is codon optimized for expression in particular cells, such as eukaryotic cells. The eukaryotic cells may be those of or derived from a particular organism, such as a mammal, including but not limited to human, mouse, rat, rabbit, dog, or non-human primate. In general, codon optimization refers to a process of modifying a nucleic acid sequence for enhanced expression in the host cells of interest by replacing at least one codon (e.g. about or more than about 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 50, or more codons) of the native sequence with codons that are more frequently or most frequently used in the genes of that host cell while maintaining the native amino acid sequence. Various species exhibit particular bias for certain codons of a particular amino acid. Codon bias (differences in codon usage between organisms) often correlates with the efficiency of translation of messenger RNA (mRNA), which is in turn believed to be dependent on, among other things, the properties of the codons being translated and the availability of particular transfer RNA (tRNA) molecules. The predominance of selected tRNAs in a cell is generally a reflection of the codons used most frequently in peptide synthesis. Accordingly, genes can be tailored for optimal gene expression in a given organism based on codon optimization. Codon usage tables are readily available, for example, at the “Codon Usage Database”, and these tables can be adapted in a number of ways. See Nakamura, Y., et al. “Codon usage tabulated from the international DNA sequence databases: status for the year 2000” Nucl. Acids Res. 28:292 (2000). Computer algorithms for codon optimizing a particular sequence for expression in a particular host cell are also available, such as Gene Forge (Aptagen; Jacobus, PA), are also available. In some embodiments, one or more codons (e.g. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 50, or more, or all codons) in a sequence encoding a CRISPR enzyme correspond to the most frequently used codon for a particular amino acid.

In general, a guide sequence is any polynucleotide sequence having sufficient complementarity with a target polynucleotide sequence to hybridize with the target sequence and direct sequence-specific binding of a CRISPR complex to the target sequence. In some embodiments, the degree of complementarity between a guide sequence and its corresponding target sequence, when optimally aligned using a suitable alignment algorithm, is about or more than about 50%, 60%, 75%, 80%, 85%, 90%, 95%, 97.5%, 99%, or more. Optimal alignment may be determined with the use of any suitable algorithm for aligning sequences, non-limiting example of which include the Smith-Waterman algorithm, the Needleman-Wunsch algorithm, algorithms based on the Burrows-Wheeler Transform (e.g. the Burrows Wheeler Aligner), ClustalW, Clustal X, BLAT, Novoalign (Novocraft Technologies, ELAND (Illumina, San Diego, CA), SOAP (available at soap.genomics.org.cn), and Maq (available at maq.sourceforge.net). In some embodiments, a guide sequence is about or more than about 5, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 35, 40, 45, 50, 75, or more nucleotides in length. In some embodiments, a guide sequence is less than about 75, 50, 45, 40, 35, 30, 25, 20, 15, 12, or fewer nucleotides in length. The ability of a guide sequence to direct sequence-specific binding of a CRISPR complex to a target sequence may be assessed by any suitable assay. For example, the components of a CRISPR system sufficient to form a CRISPR complex, including the guide sequence to be tested, may be provided to a host cell having the corresponding target sequence, such as by transfection with vectors encoding the components of the CRISPR sequence, followed by an assessment of preferential cleavage within the target sequence, such as by Surveyor assay as described herein. Similarly, cleavage of a target polynucleotide sequence may be evaluated in a test tube by providing the target sequence, components of a CRISPR complex, including the guide sequence to be tested and a control guide sequence different from the test guide sequence, and comparing binding or rate of cleavage at the target sequence between the test and control guide sequence reactions. Other assays are possible, and will occur to those skilled in the art.

A guide sequence may be selected to target any target sequence. In some embodiments, the target sequence is a sequence within a genome of a cell. Exemplary target sequences include those that are unique in the target genome. For example, for the S. pyogenes Cas9, a unique target sequence in a genome may include a Cas9 target site of the form MMMMMMMMNNNNNNNNNNNNXGG (SEQ ID NO: 18) where NNNNNNNNNNNNXGG (SEQ ID NO: 19) (N is A, G, T, or C; and X can be anything) has a single occurrence in the genome. A unique target sequence in a genome may include an S. pyogenes Cas9 target site of the form MMMMMMMMMNNNNNNNNNNNXGG (SEQ ID NO: 20) where NNNNNNNNNNNXGG (SEQ ID NO: 21) (N is A, G, T, or C; and X can be anything) has a single occurrence in the genome. For the S. thermophilus CRISPRI Cas9, a unique target sequence in a genome may include a Cas9 target site of the form MMMMMMMMNNNNNNNNNNNNXXAGAAW (SEQ ID NO: 22) where NNNNNNNNNNNNXXAGAAW (SEQ ID NO: 23) (N is A, G, T, or C; X can be anything; and W is A or T) has a single occurrence in the genome. A unique target sequence in a genome may include an S. thermophilus CRISPRI Cas9 target site of the form MMMMMMMMMNNNNNNNNNNNXXAGAAW (SEQ ID NO: 24) where NNNNNNNNNNNXXAGAAW (SEQ ID NO: 25) (N is A, G, T, or C; X can be anything; and W is A or T) has a single occurrence in the genome. For the S. pyogenes Cas9, a unique target sequence in a genome may include a Cas9 target site of the form MMMMMMMMNNNNNNNNNNNNXGGXG (SEQ ID NO: 26) where NNNNNNNNNNNNXGGXG (SEQ ID NO: 27) (N is A, G, T, or C; and X can be anything) has a single occurrence in the genome. A unique target sequence in a genome may include an S. pyogenes Cas9 target site of the form MMMMMMMMMNNNNNNNNNNNXGGXG (SEQ ID NO: 28) where NNNNNNNNNNNXGGXG (SEQ ID NO: 29) (N is A, G, T, or C; and X can be anything) has a single occurrence in the genome. In each of these sequences “M” may be A, G, T, or C, and need not be considered in identifying a sequence as unique.

In some embodiments, a guide sequence is selected to reduce the degree of secondary structure within the guide sequence. Secondary structure may be determined by any suitable polynucleotide folding algorithm. Some programs are based on calculating the minimal Gibbs free energy. An example of one such algorithm is mFold, as described by Zuker and Stiegler (Nucleic Acids Res. 9 (1981), 133-148). Another example folding algorithm is the online webserver RNAfold, developed at Institute for Theoretical Chemistry at the University of Vienna, using the centroid structure prediction algorithm (see e.g. A. R. Gruber et al., 2008, Cell 106(1): 23-24; and P A Carr and G M Church, 2009, Nature Biotechnology 27(12): 1151-62). Further algorithms may be found in U.S. application Ser. No. 61/836,080 (attorney docket 44790.11.2022; Broad Reference BI-2013/004A); incorporated herein by reference.

In general, a tracr mate sequence includes any sequence that has sufficient complementarity with a tracr sequence to promote one or more of: (1) excision of a guide sequence flanked by tracr mate sequences in a cell containing the corresponding tracr sequence; and (2) formation of a CRISPR complex at a target sequence, wherein the CRISPR complex comprises the tracr mate sequence hybridized to the tracr sequence. In general, degree of complementarity is with reference to the optimal alignment of the tracr mate sequence and tracr sequence, along the length of the shorter of the two sequences. Optimal alignment may be determined by any suitable alignment algorithm, and may further account for secondary structures, such as self-complementarity within either the tracr sequence or tracr mate sequence. In some embodiments, the degree of complementarity between the tracr sequence and tracr mate sequence along the length of the shorter of the two when optimally aligned is about or more than about 25%, 30%, 40%, 50%, 60%, 70%, 80%, 90%, 95%, 97.5%, 99%, or higher. Example illustrations of optimal alignment between a tracr sequence and a tracr mate sequence are provided in FIGS. 10B and 11B. In some embodiments, the tracr sequence is about or more than about 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 25, 30, 40, 50, or more nucleotides in length. In some embodiments, the tracr sequence and tracr mate sequence are contained within a single transcript, such that hybridization between the two produces a transcript having a secondary structure, such as a hairpin. Preferred loop forming sequences for use in hairpin structures are four nucleotides in length, and most preferably have the sequence GAAA. However, longer or shorter loop sequences may be used, as may alternative sequences. The sequences preferably include a nucleotide triplet (for example, AAA), and an additional nucleotide (for example C or G). Examples of loop forming sequences include CAAA and AAAG. In an embodiment of the invention, the transcript or transcribed polynucleotide sequence has at least two or more hairpins. In preferred embodiments, the transcript has two, three, four or five hairpins. In a further embodiment of the invention, the transcript has at most five hairpins. In some embodiments, the single transcript further includes a transcription termination sequence; preferably this is a polyT sequence, for example six T nucleotides. An example illustration of such a hairpin structure is provided in the lower portion of FIG. 11B, where the portion of the sequence 5′ of the final “N” and upstream of the loop corresponds to the tracr mate sequence, and the portion of the sequence 3′ of the loop corresponds to the tracr sequence. Further non-limiting examples of single polynucleotides comprising a guide sequence, a tracr mate sequence, and a tracr sequence are as follows (listed 5′ to 3′), where “N” represents a base of a guide sequence, the first block of lower case letters represent the tracr mate sequence, and the second block of lower case letters represent the tracr sequence, and the final poly-T sequence represents the transcription terminator: (1) NNNNNNNNNN NNNNNNNNNN gtttttgtact ctcaagattt aGAAAtaaat cttgcagaag ctacaaagat aaggcttcat gccgaaatca acaccctgtc attttatggc agggtgtttt cgttatttaa TTTTTT (SEQ ID NO: 30); (2) NNNNNNNNNN NNNNNNNNNN gtttttgtac tctcaGAAAt gcagaagcta caaagataag gcttcatgcc gaaatcaaca ccctgtcatt ttatggcagg gtgttttcgt tatttaaTTT TTT (SEQ ID NO: 31); (3) NNNNNNNNNN NNNNNNNNNN gtttttgtac tctcaGAAAt gcagaagcta caaagataag gcttcatgcc gaaatcaaca ccctgtcatt ttatggcagg gtgtTTTTTT (SEQ ID NO: 32); (4) NNNNNNNNNN NNNNNNNNNN gttttagagc taGAAAtagc aagttaaaat aaggctagtc cgttatcaac ttgaaaaagt ggcaccgagt cggtgcTTTT TT (SEQ ID NO: 33); (5) NNNNNNNNNN NNNNNNNNNN gttttagagc taGAAATAGc aagttaaaat aaggctagtc cgttatcaac ttgaaaaagt gTTTTTTT (SEQ ID NO: 34); and (6) NNNNNNNNNN NNNNNNNNNN gttttagagc tagAAATAGc aagttaaaat aaggctagtc cgttatcaTT TTTTTT (SEQ ID NO: 35). In some embodiments, sequences (1) to (3) are used in combination with Cas9 from S. thermophilus CRISPRI. In some embodiments, sequences (4) to (6) are used in combination with Cas9 from S. pyogenes. In some embodiments, the tracr sequence is a separate transcript from a transcript comprising the tracr mate sequence (such as illustrated in the top portion of FIG. 11B).

In some embodiments, the CRISPR enzyme is part of a fusion protein comprising one or more heterologous protein domains (e.g. about or more than about 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, or more domains in addition to the CRISPR enzyme). A CRISPR enzyme fusion protein may comprise any additional protein sequence, and optionally a linker sequence between any two domains. Examples of protein domains that may be fused to a CRISPR enzyme include, without limitation, epitope tags, reporter gene sequences, and protein domains having one or more of the following activities: methylase activity, demethylase activity, transcription activation activity, transcription repression activity, transcription release factor activity, histone modification activity, RNA cleavage activity and nucleic acid binding activity. Non-limiting examples of epitope tags include histidine (His) tags, V5 tags, FLAG tags, influenza hemagglutinin (HA) tags, Myc tags, VSV-G tags, and thioredoxin (Trx) tags. Examples of reporter genes include, but are not limited to, glutathione-S-transferase (GST), horseradish peroxidase (HRP), chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) beta-galactosidase, beta-glucuronidase, luciferase, green fluorescent protein (GFP), HcRed, DsRed, cyan fluorescent protein (CFP), yellow fluorescent protein (YFP), and autofluorescent proteins including blue fluorescent protein (BFP). A CRISPR enzyme may be fused to a gene sequence encoding a protein or a fragment of a protein that bind DNA molecules or bind other cellular molecules, including but not limited to maltose binding protein (MBP), S-tag, Lex A DNA binding domain (DBD) fusions, GAL4 DNA binding domain fusions, and herpes simplex virus (HSV) BP16 protein fusions. Additional domains that may form part of a fusion protein comprising a CRISPR enzyme are described in US20110059502, incorporated herein by reference. In some embodiments, a tagged CRISPR enzyme is used to identify the location of a target sequence.

In an aspect of the invention, a reporter gene which includes but is not limited to glutathione-S-transferase (GST), horseradish peroxidase (HRP), chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) beta-galactosidase, beta-glucuronidase, luciferase, green fluorescent protein (GFP), HcRed, DsRed, cyan fluorescent protein (CFP), yellow fluorescent protein (YFP), and autofluorescent proteins including blue fluorescent protein (BFP), may be introduced into a cell to encode a gene product which serves as a marker by which to measure the alteration or modification of expression of the gene product. In a further embodiment of the invention, the DNA molecule encoding the gene product may be introduced into the cell via a vector. In a preferred embodiment of the invention the gene product is luciferase. In a further embodiment of the invention the expression of the gene product is decreased.

In some aspects, the invention provides methods comprising delivering one or more polynucleotides, such as or one or more vectors as described herein, one or more transcripts thereof, and/or one or proteins transcribed therefrom, to a host cell. In some aspects, the invention further provides cells produced by such methods, and organisms (such as animals, plants, or fungi) comprising or produced from such cells. In some embodiments, a CRISPR enzyme in combination with (and optionally complexed with) a guide sequence is delivered to a cell. Conventional viral and non-viral based gene transfer methods can be used to introduce nucleic acids in mammalian cells or target tissues. Such methods can be used to administer nucleic acids encoding components of a CRISPR system to cells in culture, or in a host organism. Non-viral vector delivery systems include DNA plasmids, RNA (e.g. a transcript of a vector described herein), naked nucleic acid, and nucleic acid complexed with a delivery vehicle, such as a liposome. Viral vector delivery systems include DNA and RNA viruses, which have either episomal or integrated genomes after delivery to the cell. For a review of gene therapy procedures, see Anderson, Science 256:808-813 (1992); Nabel & Felgner, TIBTECH 11:211-217 (1993); Mitani & Caskey, TIBTECH 11:162-166 (1993); Dillon, TIBTECH 11:167-175 (1993); Miller, Nature 357:455-460 (1992); Van Brunt, Biotechnology 6(10):1149-1154 (1988); Vigne, Restorative Neurology and Neuroscience 8:35-36 (1995); Kremer & Perricaudet, British Medical Bulletin 51(1):31-44 (1995); Haddada et al., in Current Topics in Microbiology and Immunology Doerfler and Bohm (eds) (1995); and Yu et al., Gene Therapy 1:13-26 (1994).

Methods of non-viral delivery of nucleic acids include lipofection, nucleofection, microinjection, biolistics, virosomes, liposomes, immunoliposomes, polycation or lipid:nucleic acid conjugates, naked DNA, artificial virions, and agent-enhanced uptake of DNA. Lipofection is described in e.g., U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,049,386, 4,946,787; and 4,897,355) and lipofection reagents are sold commercially (e.g., Transfectam™ and Lipofectin™). Cationic and neutral lipids that are suitable for efficient receptor-recognition lipofection of polynucleotides include those of Felgner, WO 91/17424; WO 91/16024. Delivery can be to cells (e.g. in vitro or ex vivo administration) or target tissues (e.g. in vivo administration).

The preparation of lipid:nucleic acid complexes, including targeted liposomes such as immunolipid complexes, is well known to one of skill in the art (see, e.g., Crystal, Science 270:404-410 (1995); Blaese et al., Cancer Gene Ther. 2:291-297 (1995); Behr et al., Bioconjugate Chem. 5:382-389 (1994); Remy et al., Bioconjugate Chem. 5:647-654 (1994); Gao et al., Gene Therapy 2:710-722 (1995); Ahmad et al., Cancer Res. 52:4817-4820 (1992); U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,186,183, 4,217,344, 4,235,871, 4,261,975, 4,485,054, 4,501,728, 4,774,085, 4,837,028, and 4,946,787).

The use of RNA or DNA viral based systems for the delivery of nucleic acids take advantage of highly evolved processes for targeting a virus to specific cells in the body and trafficking the viral payload to the nucleus. Viral vectors can be administered directly to patients (in vivo) or they can be used to treat cells in vitro, and the modified cells may optionally be administered to patients (ex vivo). Conventional viral based systems could include retroviral, lentivirus, adenoviral, adeno-associated and herpes simplex virus vectors for gene transfer. Integration in the host genome is possible with the retrovirus, lentivirus, and adeno-associated virus gene transfer methods, often resulting in long term expression of the inserted transgene. Additionally, high transduction efficiencies have been observed in many different cell types and target tissues.

The tropism of a retrovirus can be altered by incorporating foreign envelope proteins, expanding the potential target population of target cells. Lentiviral vectors are retroviral vectors that are able to transduce or infect non-dividing cells and typically produce high viral titers. Selection of a retroviral gene transfer system would therefore depend on the target tissue. Retroviral vectors are comprised of cis-acting long terminal repeats with packaging capacity for up to 6-10 kb of foreign sequence. The minimum cis-acting LTRs are sufficient for replication and packaging of the vectors, which are then used to integrate the therapeutic gene into the target cell to provide permanent transgene expression. Widely used retroviral vectors include those based upon murine leukemia virus (MuLV), gibbon ape leukemia virus (GaLV), Simian Immuno deficiency virus (SIV), human immuno deficiency virus (HIV), and combinations thereof (see, e.g., Buchscher et al., J. Virol. 66:2731-2739 (1992); Johann et al., J. Virol. 66:1635-1640 (1992); Sommnerfelt et al., Virol. 176:58-59 (1990); Wilson et al., J. Virol. 63:2374-2378 (1989); Miller et al., J. Virol. 65:2220-2224 (1991); PCT/US94/05700).In applications where transient expression is preferred, adenoviral based systems may be used. Adenoviral based vectors are capable of very high transduction efficiency in many cell types and do not require cell division. With such vectors, high titer and levels of expression have been obtained. This vector can be produced in large quantities in a relatively simple system. Adeno-associated virus (“AAV”) vectors may also be used to transduce cells with target nucleic acids, e.g., in the in vitro production of nucleic acids and peptides, and for in vivo and ex vivo gene therapy procedures (see, e.g., West et al., Virology 160:38-47 (1987); U.S. Pat. No. 4,797,368; WO 93/24641; Kotin, Human Gene Therapy 5:793-801 (1994); Muzyczka, J. Clin. Invest. 94:1351 (1994). Construction of recombinant AAV vectors are described in a number of publications, including U.S. Pat. No. 5,173,414; Tratschin et al., Mol. Cell. Biol. 5:3251-3260 (1985); Tratschin, et al., Mol. Cell. Biol. 4:2072-2081 (1984); Hermonat & Muzyczka, PNAS 81:6466-6470 (1984); and Samulski et al., J. Virol. 63:03822-3828 (1989).

Packaging cells are typically used to form virus particles that are capable of infecting a host cell. Such cells include 293 cells, which package adenovirus, and W2 cells or PA317 cells, which package retrovirus. Viral vectors used in gene therapy are usually generated by producing a cell line that packages a nucleic acid vector into a viral particle. The vectors typically contain the minimal viral sequences required for packaging and subsequent integration into a host, other viral sequences being replaced by an expression cassette for the polynucleotide(s) to be expressed. The missing viral functions are typically supplied in trans by the packaging cell line. For example, AAV vectors used in gene therapy typically only possess ITR sequences from the AAV genome which are required for packaging and integration into the host genome. Viral DNA is packaged in a cell line, which contains a helper plasmid encoding the other AAV genes, namely rep and cap, but lacking ITR sequences. The cell line may also be infected with adenovirus as a helper. The helper virus promotes replication of the AAV vector and expression of AAV genes from the helper plasmid. The helper plasmid is not packaged in significant amounts due to a lack of ITR sequences. Contamination with adenovirus can be reduced by, e.g., heat treatment to which adenovirus is more sensitive than AAV. Additional methods for the delivery of nucleic acids to cells are known to those skilled in the art. See, for example, US20030087817, incorporated herein by reference.

In some embodiments, a host cell is transiently or non-transiently transfected with one or more vectors described herein. In some embodiments, a cell is transfected as it naturally occurs in a subject. In some embodiments, a cell that is transfected is taken from a subject. In some embodiments, the cell is derived from cells taken from a subject, such as a cell line. A wide variety of cell lines for tissue culture are known in the art. Examples of cell lines include, but are not limited to, C8161, CCRF-CEM, MOLT, mIMCD-3, NHDF, HeLa-S3, Huh1, Huh4, Huh7, HUVEC, HASMC, HEKn, HEKa, MiaPaCell, Panc1, PC-3, TF1, CTLL-2, C1R, Rat6, CV1, RPTE, A10, T24, J82, A375, ARH-77, Calu1, SW480, SW620, SKOV3, SK-UT, CaCo2, P388D1, SEM-K2, WEHI-231, HB56, TIB55, Jurkat, J45.01, LRMB, Bcl-1, BC-3, IC21, DLD2, Raw264.7, NRK, NRK-52E, MRC5, MEF, Hep G2, HeLa B, HeLa T4, COS, COS-1, COS-6, COS-M6A, BS-C-1 monkey kidney epithelial, BALB/3T3 mouse embryo fibroblast, 3T3 Swiss, 3T3-L1, 132-d5 human fetal fibroblasts; 10.1 mouse fibroblasts, 293-T, 3T3, 721, 9L, A2780, A2780ADR, A2780cis, A172, A20, A253, A431, A-549, ALC, B16, B35, BCP-1 cells, BEAS-2B, bEnd.3, BHK-21, BR 293, BxPC3, C3H-10T1/2, C6/36, Cal-27, CHO, CHO-7, CHO-IR, CHO-K1, CHO-K2, CHO-T, CHO Dhfr −/−, COR-L23, COR-L23/CPR, COR-L23/5010, COR-L23/R23, COS-7, COV-434, CML T1, CMT, CT26, D17, DH82, DU145, DuCaP, EL4, EM2, EM3, EMT6/AR1, EMT6/AR10.0, FM3, H1299, H69, HB54, HB55, HCA2, HEK-293, HeLa, Hepalclc7, HL-60, HMEC, HT-29, Jurkat, JY cells, K562 cells, Ku812, KCL22, KG1, KYO1, LNCap, Ma-Mel 1-48, MC-38, MCF-7, MCF-10A, MDA-MB-231, MDA-MB-468, MDA-MB-435, MDCK II, MDCK II, MOR/0.2R, MONO-MAC 6, MTD-1A, MyEnd, NCI-H69/CPR, NCI-H69/LX10, NCI-H69/LX20, NCI-H69/LX4, NIH-3T3, NALM-1, NW-145, OPCN/OPCT cell lines, Peer, PNT-1A/PNT 2, RenCa, RIN-5F, RMA/RMAS, Saos-2 cells, Sf-9, SkBr3, T2, T-47D, T84, THP1 cell line, U373, U87, U937, VCaP, Vero cells, WM39, WT-49, X63, YAC-1, YAR, and transgenic varieties thereof. Cell lines are available from a variety of sources known to those with skill in the art (see, e.g., the American Type Culture Collection (ATCC) (Manassas, Va.)). In some embodiments, a cell transfected with one or more vectors described herein is used to establish a new cell line comprising one or more vector-derived sequences. In some embodiments, a cell transiently transfected with the components of a CRISPR system as described herein (such as by transient transfection of one or more vectors, or transfection with RNA), and modified through the activity of a CRISPR complex, is used to establish a new cell line comprising cells containing the modification but lacking any other exogenous sequence. In some embodiments, cells transiently or non-transiently transfected with one or more vectors described herein, or cell lines derived from such cells are used in assessing one or more test compounds.

In some embodiments, one or more vectors described herein are used to produce a non-human transgenic animal or transgenic plant. In some embodiments, the transgenic animal is a mammal, such as a mouse, rat, or rabbit. In certain embodiments, the organism or subject is a plant. In certain embodiments, the organism or subject or plant is algae. Methods for producing transgenic plants and animals are known in the art, and generally begin with a method of cell transfection, such as described herein. Transgenic animals are also provided, as are transgenic plants, especially crops and algae. The transgenic animal or plant may be useful in applications outside of providing a disease model. These may include food or feed production through expression of, for instance, higher protein, carbohydrate, nutrient or vitamins levels than would normally be seen in the wildtype. In this regard, transgenic plants, especially pulses and tubers, and animals, especially mammals such as livestock (cows, sheep, goats and pigs), but also poultry and edible insects, are preferred.

Transgenic algae or other plants such as rape may be particularly useful in the production of vegetable oils or biofuels such as alcohols (especially methanol and ethanol), for instance. These may be engineered to express or overexpress high levels of oil or alcohols for use in the oil or biofuel industries.

In one aspect, the invention provides for methods of modifying a target polynucleotide in a eukaryotic cell, which may be in vivo, ex vivo or in vitro. In some embodiments, the method comprises sampling a cell or population of cells from a human or non-human animal or plant (including micro-algae), and modifying the cell or cells. Culturing may occur at any stage ex vivo. The cell or cells may even be re-introduced into the non-human animal or plant (including micro-algae).

In one aspect, the invention provides for methods of modifying a target polynucleotide in a eukaryotic cell. In some embodiments, the method comprises allowing a CRISPR complex to bind to the target polynucleotide to effect cleavage of said target polynucleotide thereby modifying the target polynucleotide, wherein the CRISPR complex comprises a CRISPR enzyme complexed with a guide sequence hybridized to a target sequence within said target polynucleotide, wherein said guide sequence is linked to a tracr mate sequence which in turn hybridizes to a tracr sequence.

In one aspect, the invention provides a method of modifying expression of a polynucleotide in a eukaryotic cell. In some embodiments, the method comprises allowing a CRISPR complex to bind to the polynucleotide such that said binding results in increased or decreased expression of said polynucleotide; wherein the CRISPR complex comprises a CRISPR enzyme complexed with a guide sequence hybridized to a target sequence within said polynucleotide, wherein said guide sequence is linked to a tracr mate sequence which in turn hybridizes to a tracr sequence.

With recent advances in crop genomics, the ability to use CRISPR-Cas systems to perform efficient and cost effective gene editing and manipulation will allow the rapid selection and comparison of single and multiplexed genetic manipulations to transform such genomes for improved production and enhanced traits. In this regard reference is made to US patents and publications: U.S. Pat. No. 6,603,061—Agrobacterium-Mediated Plant Transformation Method; U.S. Pat. No. 7,868,149—Plant Genome Sequences and Uses Thereof and US 2009/0100536—Transgenic Plants with Enhanced Agronomic Traits, all the contents and disclosure of each of which are herein incorporated by reference in their entirety. In the practice of the invention, the contents and disclosure of Morrell et al “Crop genomics: advances and applications” Nat Rev Genet. 2011 Dec. 29; 13(2):85-96 are also herein incorporated by reference in their entirety. In an advantageous embodiment of the invention, the CRISPR/Cas9 system is used to engineer microalgae. That the CRISPR-Cas system is able to be employed in plant systems is also provided in the manuscript “Efficient Genome Editing in Plants using a CRISPR/Cas System”, by Feng et al. Cell Res. 2013 Aug. 20. doi: 10.1038/cr.2013.114. [Epub ahead of print], incorporated by reference in its entirety, wherein it is demonstrated that engineered CRISPR/Cas complexes may be used to create double strand breaks at specific sites of the plant genome to achieve targeted genome modifications in both dicot and monocot plants. Accordingly, reference herein to animal cells may also apply, mutatis mutandis, to plant cells unless otherwise apparent.

In plants, pathogens are often host-specific. For example, Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. lycopersici causes tomato wilt but attacks only tomato, and F. oxysporum f. dianthii Puccinia graminis f. sp. tritici attacks only wheat. Plants have existing and induced defenses to resist most pathogens. Mutations and recombination events across plant generations lead to genetic variability that gives rise to susceptibility, especially as pathogens reproduce with more frequency than plants. In plants there can be non-host resistance, e.g., the host and pathogen are incompatible. There can also be Horizontal Resistance, e.g., partial resistance against all races of a pathogen, typically controlled by many genes and Vertical Resistance, e.g., complete resistance to some races of a pathogen but not to other races, typically controlled by a few genes. In a Gene-for-Gene level, plants and pathogens evolve together, and the genetic changes in one balance changes in other. Accordingly, using Natural Variability, breeders combine most useful genes for Yield, Quality, Uniformity, Hardiness, Resistance. The sources of resistance genes include native or foreign Varieties, Heirloom Varieties, Wild Plant Relatives, and Induced Mutations, e.g., treating plant material with mutagenic agents. Using the present invention, plant breeders are provided with a new tool to induce mutations. Accordingly, one skilled in the art can analyze the genome of sources of resistance genes, and in Varieties having desired characteristics or traits employ the present invention to induce the rise of resistance genes, with more precision than previous mutagenic agents and hence accelerate and improve plant breeding programs.

In one aspect, the invention provides kits containing any one or more of the elements disclosed in the above methods and compositions. In some embodiments, the kit comprises a vector system and instructions for using the kit. In some embodiments, the vector system comprises (a) a first regulatory element operably linked to a tracr mate sequence and one or more insertion sites for inserting a guide sequence upstream of the tracr mate sequence, wherein when expressed, the guide sequence directs sequence-specific binding of a CRISPR complex to a target sequence in a eukaryotic cell, wherein the CRISPR complex comprises a CRISPR enzyme complexed with (1) the guide sequence that is hybridized to the target sequence, and (2) the tracr mate sequence that is hybridized to the tracr sequence; and/or (b) a second regulatory element operably linked to an enzyme-coding sequence encoding said CRISPR enzyme comprising a nuclear localization sequence. Elements may be provided individually or in combinations, and may be provided in any suitable container, such as a vial, a bottle, or a tube. In some embodiments, the kit includes instructions in one or more languages, for example in more than one language.

In some embodiments, a kit comprises one or more reagents for use in a process utilizing one or more of the elements described herein. Reagents may be provided in any suitable container. For example, a kit may provide one or more reaction or storage buffers. Reagents may be provided in a form that is usable in a particular assay, or in a form that requires addition of one or more other components before use (e.g. in concentrate or lyophilized form). A buffer can be any buffer, including but not limited to a sodium carbonate buffer, a sodium bicarbonate buffer, a borate buffer, a Tris buffer, a MOPS buffer, a HEPES buffer, and combinations thereof. In some embodiments, the buffer is alkaline. In some embodiments, the buffer has a pH from about 7 to about 10. In some embodiments, the kit comprises one or more oligonucleotides corresponding to a guide sequence for insertion into a vector so as to operably link the guide sequence and a regulatory element. In some embodiments, the kit comprises a homologous recombination template polynucleotide.

In one aspect, the invention provides methods for using one or more elements of a CRISPR system. The CRISPR complex of the invention provides an effective means for modifying a target polynucleotide. The CRISPR complex of the invention has a wide variety of utility including modifying (e.g., deleting, inserting, translocating, inactivating, activating) a target polynucleotide in a multiplicity of cell types. As such the CRISPR complex of the invention has a broad spectrum of applications in, e.g., gene therapy, drug screening, disease diagnosis, and prognosis. An exemplary CRISPR complex comprises a CRISPR enzyme complexed with a guide sequence hybridized to a target sequence within the target polynucleotide. The guide sequence is linked to a tracr mate sequence, which in turn hybridizes to a tracr sequence.

The target polynucleotide of a CRISPR complex can be any polynucleotide endogenous or exogenous to the eukaryotic cell. For example, the target polynucleotide can be a polynucleotide residing in the nucleus of the eukaryotic cell. The target polynucleotide can be a sequence coding a gene product (e.g., a protein) or a non-coding sequence (e.g., a regulatory polynucleotide or a junk DNA). The target can be a control element or a regulatory element or a promoter or an enhancer or a silencer. The promoter may, in some embodiments, be in the region of +200 bp or even +1000 bp from the TTS. In some embodiments, the regulatory region may be an enhancer. The enhancer is typically more than +1000 bp from the TTS. More in particular, expression of eukaryotic protein-coding genes generally is regulated through multiple cis-acting transcription-control regions. Some control elements are located close to the start site (promoter-proximal elements), whereas others lie more distant (enhancers and silencers) Promoters determine the site of transcription initiation and direct binding of RNA polymerase II. Three types of promoter sequences have been identified in eukaryotic DNA. The TATA box, the most common, is prevalent in rapidly transcribed genes. Initiator promoters infrequently are found in some genes, and CpG islands are characteristic of transcribed genes. Promoter-proximal elements occur within about 200 base pairs of the start site. Several such elements, containing up to about 20 base pairs, may help regulate a particular gene. Enhancers, which are usually about 100-200 base pairs in length, contain multiple 8- to 20-bp control elements. They may be located from 200 base pairs to tens of kilobases upstream or downstream from a promoter, within an intron, or downstream from the final exon of a gene. Promoter-proximal elements and enhancers may be cell-type specific, functioning only in specific differentiated cell types. However, any of these regions can be the target sequence and are encompassed by the concept that the target can be a control element or a regulatory element or a promoter or an enhancer or a silencer.

Without wishing to be bound by theory, it is believed that the target sequence should be associated with a PAM (protospacer adjacent motif); that is, a short sequence recognized by the CRISPR complex. The precise sequence and length requirements for the PAM differ depending on the CRISPR enzyme used, but PAMs are typically 2-5 base pair sequences adjacent the protospacer (that is, the target sequence) Examples of PAM sequences are given in the examples section below, and the skilled person will be able to identify further PAM sequences for use with a given CRISPR enzyme.

The target polynucleotide of a CRISPR complex may include a number of disease-associated genes and polynucleotides as well as signaling biochemical pathway-associated genes and polynucleotides as listed in U.S. provisional patent applications 61/736,527 and 61/748,427 having Broad reference BI-2011/008/WSGR Docket No. 44063-701.101 and BI-2011/008/WSGR Docket No. 44063-701.102 respectively, both entitled SYSTEMS METHODS AND COMPOSITIONS FOR SEQUENCE MANIPULATION filed on Dec. 12, 2012 and Jan. 2, 2013, respectively, the contents of all of which are herein incorporated by reference in their entirety.

Examples of target polynucleotides include a sequence associated with a signaling biochemical pathway, e.g., a signaling biochemical pathway-associated gene or polynucleotide. Examples of target polynucleotides include a disease associated gene or polynucleotide. A “disease-associated” gene or polynucleotide refers to any gene or polynucleotide which is yielding transcription or translation products at an abnormal level or in an abnormal form in cells derived from a disease-affected tissues compared with tissues or cells of a non disease control. It may be a gene that becomes expressed at an abnormally high level; it may be a gene that becomes expressed at an abnormally low level, where the altered expression correlates with the occurrence and/or progression of the disease. A disease-associated gene also refers to a gene possessing mutation(s) or genetic variation that is directly responsible or is in linkage disequilibrium with a gene(s) that is responsible for the etiology of a disease. The transcribed or translated products may be known or unknown, and may be at a normal or abnormal level.

Examples of disease-associated genes and polynucleotides are available from McKusick-Nathans Institute of Genetic Medicine, Johns Hopkins University (Baltimore, Md.) and National Center for Biotechnology Information, National Library of Medicine (Bethesda, Md.), available on the World Wide Web.

Examples of disease-associated genes and polynucleotides are listed in Tables A and B. Disease specific information is available from McKusick-Nathans Institute of Genetic Medicine, Johns Hopkins University (Baltimore, Md.) and National Center for Biotechnology Information, National Library of Medicine (Bethesda, Md.), available on the World Wide Web. Examples of signaling biochemical pathway-associated genes and polynucleotides are listed in Table C.

Mutations in these genes and pathways can result in production of improper proteins or proteins in improper amounts which affect function. Further examples of genes, diseases and proteins are hereby incorporated by reference from US Provisional application. Such genes, proteins and pathways may be the target polynucleotide of a CRISPR complex.

TABLE A DISEASE/DISORDERS GENE(S) Neoplasia PTEN; ATM; ATR; EGFR; ERBB2; ERBB3; ERBB4; Notch1; Notch2; Notch3; Notch4; AKT; AKT2; AKT3; HIF; HIF1a; HIF3a; Met; HRG; Bcl2; PPAR alpha; PPAR gamma; WT1 (Wilms Tumor); FGF Receptor Family members (5 members: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5); CDKN2a; APC; RB (retinoblastoma); MEN1; VHL; BRCA1; BRCA2; AR (Androgen Receptor); TSG101; IGF; IGF Receptor; Igf1 (4 variants); Igf2 (3 variants); Igf 1 Receptor; Igf 2 Receptor; Bax; Bcl2; caspases family (9 members: 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9, 12); Kras; Apc Age-related Macular Abcr; Ccl2; Cc2; cp (ceruloplasmin); Timp3; cathepsinD; Degeneration Vldlr; Ccr2 Schizophrenia Neuregulin1 (Nrg1); Erb4 (receptor for Neuregulin); Complexin1 (Cplx1); Tph1 Tryptophan hydroxylase; Tph2 Tryptophan hydroxylase 2; Neurexin 1; GSK3; GSK3a; GSK3b Disorders 5-HTT (Slc6a4); COMT; DRD (Drd1a); SLC6A3; DAOA; DTNBP1; Dao (Dao1) Trinucleotide Repeat HTT (Huntington's Dx); SBMA/SMAX1/AR (Kennedy's Disorders Dx); FXN/X25 (Friedrich's Ataxia); ATX3 (Machado- Joseph's Dx); ATXN1 and ATXN2 (spinocerebellar ataxias); DMPK (myotonic dystrophy); Atrophin-1 and Atn1 (DRPLA Dx); CBP (Creb-BP - global instability); VLDLR (Alzheimer's); Atxn7; Atxn10 Fragile X Syndrome FMR2; FXR1; FXR2; mGLUR5 Secretase Related APH-1 (alpha and beta); Presenilin (Psen1); nicastrin Disorders (Ncstn); PEN-2 Others Nos1; Parp1; Nat1; Nat2 Prion - related disorders Prp ALS SOD1; ALS2; STEX; FUS; TARDBP; VEGF (VEGF-a; VEGF-b; VEGF-c) Drug addiction Prkce (alcohol); Drd2; Drd4; ABAT (alcohol); GRIA2; Grm5; Grin1; Htr1b; Grin2a; Drd3; Pdyn; Grial (alcohol) Autism Mecp2; BZRAP1; MDGA2; Sema5A; Neurexin 1; Fragile X (FMR2 (AFF2); FXR1; FXR2; Mglur5) Alzheimer's Disease E1; CHIP; UCH; UBB; Tau; LRP; PICALM; Clusterin; PS1; SORL1; CR1; Vldlr; Uba1; Uba3; CHIP28 (Aqp1, Aquaporin 1); Uchl1; Uchl3; APP Inflammation IL-10; IL-1 (IL-1a; IL-1b); IL-13; IL-17 (IL-17a (CTLA8); IL- 17b; IL-17c; IL-17d; IL-17f); II-23; Cx3cr1; ptpn22; TNFa; NOD2/CARD15 for IBD; IL-6; IL-12 (IL-12a; IL-12b); CTLA4; Cx3cl1 Parkinson's Disease x-Synuclein; DJ-1; LRRK2; Parkin; PINK1

TABLE B Blood and Anemia (CDAN1, CDA1, RPS19, DBA, PKLR, PK1, NT5C3, UMPH1, coagulation diseases PSN1, RHAG, RH50A, NRAMP2, SPTB, ALAS2, ANH1, ASB, and disorders ABCB7, ABC7, ASAT); Bare lymphocyte syndrome (TAPBP, TPSN, TAP2, ABCB3, PSF2, RING11, MHC2TA, C2TA, RFX5, RFXAP, RFX5), Bleeding disorders (TBXA2R, P2RX1, P2X1); Factor H and factor H-like 1 (HF1, CFH, HUS); Factor V and factor VIII (MCFD2); Factor VII deficiency (F7); Factor X deficiency (F10); Factor XI deficiency (F11); Factor XII deficiency (F12, HAF); Factor XIIIA deficiency (F13A1, F13A); Factor XIIIB deficiency (F13B); Fanconi anemia (FANCA, FACA, FA1, FA, FAA, FAAP95, FAAP90, FLJ34064, FANCB, FANCC, FACC, BRCA2, FANCD1, FANCD2, FANCD, FACD, FAD, FANCE, FACE, FANCF, XRCC9, FANCG, BRIP1, BACH1, FANCJ, PHF9, FANCL, FANCM, KIAA1596); Hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis disorders (PRF1, HPLH2, UNC13D, MUNC13-4, HPLH3, HLH3, FHL3); Hemophilia A (F8, F8C, HEMA); Hemophilia B (F9, HEMB), Hemorrhagic disorders (PI, ATT, F5); Leukocyde deficiencies and disorders (ITGB2, CD18, LCAMB, LAD, EIF2B1, EIF2BA, EIF2B2, EIF2B3, EIF2B5, LVWM, CACH, CLE, EIF2B4); Sickle cell anemia (HBB); Thalassemia (HBA2, HBB, HBD, LCRB, HBA1). Cell dysregulation B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma (BCL7A, BCL7); Leukemia (TAL1, and oncology TCL5, SCL, TAL2, FLT3, NBS1, NBS, ZNFN1A1, IK1, LYF1, diseases and disorders HOXD4, HOX4B, BCR, CML, PHL, ALL, ARNT, KRAS2, RASK2, GMPS, AF10, ARHGEF12, LARG, KIAA0382, CALM, CLTH, CEBPA, CEBP, CHIC2, BTL, FLT3, KIT, PBT, LPP, NPM1, NUP214, D9S46E, CAN, CAIN, RUNX1, CBFA2, AML1, WHSC1L1, NSD3, FLT3, AF1Q, NPM1, NUMA1, ZNF145, PLZF, PML, MYL, STAT5B, AF10, CALM, CLTH, ARL11, ARLTS1, P2RX7, P2X7, BCR, CML, PHL, ALL, GRAF, NF1, VRNF, WSS, NFNS, PTPN11, PTP2C, SHP2, NS1, BCL2, CCND1, PRAD1, BCL1, TCRA, GATA1, GF1, ERYF1, NFE1, ABL1, NQO1, DIA4, NMOR1, NUP214, D9S46E, CAN, CAIN) Inflammation and AIDS (KIR3DL1, NKAT3, NKB1, AMB11, KIR3DS1, IFNG, CXCL12, immune related SDF1); Autoimmune lymphoproliferative syndrome (TNFRSF6, APT1, diseases and disorders FAS, CD95, ALPS1A); Combined immunodeficiency, (IL2RG, SCIDX1, SCIDX, IMD4); HIV-1 (CCL5, SCYA5, D17S136E, TCP228), HIV susceptibility or infection (IL10, CSIF, CMKBR2, CCR2, CMKBR5, CCCKR5 (CCR5)); Immunodeficiencies (CD3E, CD3G, AICDA, AID, HIGM2, TNFRSF5, CD40, UNG, DGU, HIGM4, TNFSF5, CD40LG, HIGM1, IGM, FOXP3, IPEX, AIID, XPID, PIDX, TNFRSF14B, TACI); Inflammation (IL-10, IL-1 (IL-1a, IL-1b), IL-13, IL-17 (IL-17a (CTLA8), IL-17b, IL-17c, IL-17d, IL-17f), II-23, Cx3cr1, ptpn22, TNFa, NOD2/CARD15 for IBD, IL-6, IL-12 (IL-12a, IL-12b), CTLA4, Cx3cl1); Severe combined immunodeficiencies (SCIDs)(JAK3, JAKL, DCLRE1C, ARTEMIS, SCIDA, RAG1, RAG2, ADA, PTPRC, CD45, LCA, IL7R, CD3D, T3D, IL2RG, SCIDX1, SCIDX, IMD4). Metabolic, liver, Amyloid neuropathy (TTR, PALB); Amyloidosis (APOA1, APP, AAA, kidney and protein CVAP, AD1, GSN, FGA, LYZ, TTR, PALB); Cirrhosis (KRT18, KRT8, diseases and disorders CIRH1A, NAIC, TEX292, KIAA1988); Cystic fibrosis (CFTR, ABCC7, CF, MRP7); Glycogen storage diseases (SLC2A2, GLUT2, G6PC, G6PT, G6PT1, GAA, LAMP2, LAMPB, AGL, GDE, GBE1, GYS2, PYGL, PFKM); Hepatic adenoma, 142330 (TCF1, HNF1A, MODY3), Hepatic failure, early onset, and neurologic disorder (SCOD1, SCO1), Hepatic lipase deficiency (LIPC), Hepatoblastoma, cancer and carcinomas (CTNNB1, PDGFRL, PDGRL, PRLTS, AXIN1, AXIN, CTNNB1, TP53, P53, LFS1, IGF2R, MPRI, MET, CASP8, MCH5; Medullary cystic kidney disease (UMOD, HNFJ, FJHN, MCKD2, ADMCKD2); Phenylketonuria (PAH, PKU1, QDPR, DHPR, PTS); Polycystic kidney and hepatic disease (FCYT, PKHD1, ARPKD, PKD1, PKD2, PKD4, PKDTS, PRKCSH, G19P1, PCLD, SEC63). Muscular/Skeletal Becker muscular dystrophy (DMD, BMD, MYF6), Duchenne Muscular diseases and disorders Dystrophy (DMD, BMD); Emery-Dreifuss muscular dystrophy (LMNA, LMN1, EMD2, FPLD, CMD1A, HGPS, LGMD1B, LMNA, LMN1, EMD2, FPLD, CMD1A); Facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHMD1A, FSHD1A); Muscular dystrophy (FKRP, MDC1C, LGMD2I, LAMA2, LAMM, LARGE, KIAA0609, MDC1D, FCMD, TTID, MYOT, CAPN3, CANP3, DYSF, LGMD2B, SGCG, LGMD2C, DMDA1, SCG3, SGCA, ADL, DAG2, LGMD2D, DMDA2, SGCB, LGMD2E, SGCD, SGD, LGMD2F, CMD1L, TCAP, LGMD2G, CMD1N, TRIM32, HT2A, LGMD2H, FKRP, MDC1C, LGMD2I, TTN, CMD1G, TMD, LGMD2J, POMT1, CAV3, LGMD1C, SEPN1, SELN, RSMD1, PLEC1, PLTN, EBS1); Osteopetrosis (LRP5, BMND1, LRP7, LR3, OPPG, VBCH2, CLCN7, CLC7, OPTA2, OSTM1, GL, TCIRG1, TIRC7, OC116, OPTB1); Muscular atrophy (VAPB, VAPC, ALS8, SMN1, SMA1, SMA2, SMA3, SMA4, BSCL2, SPG17, GARS, SMAD1, CMT2D, HEXB, IGHMBP2, SMUBP2, CATF1, SMARD1). Neurological and ALS (SOD1, ALS2, STEX, FUS, TARDBP, VEGF (VEGF-a, VEGF-b, neuronal diseases and VEGF-c); Alzheimer disease (APP, AAA, CVAP, AD1, APOE, AD2, disorders PSEN2, AD4, STM2, APBB2, FE65L1, NOS3, PLAU, URK, ACE, DCP1, ACE1, MPO, PACIP1, PAXIP1L, PTIP, A2M, BLMH, BMH, PSEN1, AD3); Autism (Mecp2, BZRAP1, MDGA2, Sema5A, Neurexin 1, GLO1, MECP2, RTT, PPMX, MRX16, MRX79, NLGN3, NLGN4, KIAA1260, AUTSX2); Fragile X Syndrome (FMR2, FXR1, FXR2, mGLUR5); Huntington's disease and disease like disorders (HD, IT15, PRNP, PRIP, JPH3, JP3, HDL2, TBP, SCA17); Parkinson disease (NR4A2, NURR1, NOT, TINUR, SNCAIP, TBP, SCA17, SNCA, NACP, PARK1, PARK4, DJ1, PARK7, LRRK2, PARK8, PINK1, PARK6, UCHL1, PARK5, SNCA, NACP, PARK1, PARK4, PRKN, PARK2, PDJ, DBH, NDUFV2); Rett syndrome (MECP2, RTT, PPMX, MRX16, MRX79, CDKL5, STK9, MECP2, RTT, PPMX, MRX16, MRX79, x-Synuclein, DJ-1); Schizophrenia (Neuregulin1 (Nrg1), Erb4 (receptor for Neuregulin), Complexin1 (Cplx1), Tph1 Tryptophan hydroxylase, Tph2, Tryptophan hydroxylase 2, Neurexin 1, GSK3, GSK3a, GSK3b, 5-HTT (Slc6a4), COMT, DRD (Drd1a), SLC6A3, DAOA, DTNBP1, Dao (Dao1)); Secretase Related Disorders (APH-1 (alpha and beta), Presenilin (Psen1), nicastrin, (Ncstn), PEN-2, Nos1, Parp1, Nat1, Nat2); Trinucleotide Repeat Disorders (HTT (Huntington's Dx), SBMA/SMAX1/AR (Kennedy's Dx), FXN/X25 (Friedrich's Ataxia), ATX3 (Machado- Joseph's Dx), ATXN1 and ATXN2 (spinocerebellar ataxias), DMPK (myotonic dystrophy), Atrophin-1 and Atn1 (DRPLA Dx), CBP (Creb-BP - global instability), VLDLR (Alzheimer's), Atxn7, Atxn10). Occular diseases and Age-related macular degeneration (Abcr, Ccl2, Cc2, cp (ceruloplasmin), disorders Timp3, cathepsinD, Vldlr, Ccr2); Cataract (CRYAA, CRYA1, CRYBB2, CRYB2, PITX3, BFSP2, CP49, CP47, CRYAA, CRYA1, PAX6, AN2, MGDA, CRYBA1, CRYB1, CRYGC, CRYG3, CCL, LIM2, MP19, CRYGD, CRYG4, BFSP2, CP49, CP47, HSF4, CTM, HSF4, CTM, MIP, AQP0, CRYAB, CRYA2, CTPP2, CRYBB1, CRYGD, CRYG4, CRYBB2, CRYB2, CRYGC, CRYG3, CCL, CRYAA, CRYA1, GJA8, CX50, CAE1, GJA3, CX46, CZP3, CAE3, CCM1, CAM, KRIT1); Corneal clouding and dystrophy (APOA1, TGFBI, CSD2, CDGG1, CSD, BIGH3, CDG2, TACSTD2, TROP2, M1S1, VSX1, RINX, PPCD, PPD, KTCN, COL8A2, FECD, PPCD2, PIP5K3, CFD); Cornea plana congenital (KERA, CNA2); Glaucoma (MYOC, TIGR, GLC1A, JOAG, GPOA, OPTN, GLC1E, FIP2, HYPL, NRP, CYP1B1, GLC3A, OPA1, NTG, NPG, CYP1B1, GLC3A); Leber congenital amaurosis (CRB1, RP12, CRX, CORD2, CRD, RPGRIP1, LCA6, CORD9, RPE65, RP20, AIPL1, LCA4, GUCY2D, GUC2D, LCA1, CORD6, RDH12, LCA3); Macular dystrophy (ELOVL4, ADMD, STGD2, STGD3, RDS, RP7, PRPH2, PRPH, AVMD, AOFMD, VMD2).

TABLE C CELLULAR FUNCTION GENES PI3K/AKT Signaling PRKCE; ITGAM; ITGA5; IRAK1; PRKAA2; EIF2AK2; PTEN; EIF4E; PRKCZ; GRK6; MAPK1; TSC1; PLK1; AKT2; IKBKB; PIK3CA; CDK8; CDKN1B; NFKB2; BCL2; PIK3CB; PPP2R1A; MAPK8; BCL2L1; MAPK3; TSC2; ITGA1; KRAS; EIF4EBP1; RELA; PRKCD; NOS3; PRKAA1; MAPK9; CDK2; PPP2CA; PIM1; ITGB7; YWHAZ; ILK; TP53; RAF1; IKBKG; RELB; DYRK1A; CDKN1A; ITGB1; MAP2K2; JAK1; AKT1; JAK2; PIK3R1; CHUK; PDPK1; PPP2R5C; CTNNB1; MAP2K1; NFKB1; PAK3; ITGB3; CCND1; GSK3A; FRAP1; SFN; ITGA2; TTK; CSNK1A1; BRAF; GSK3B; AKT3; FOXO1; SGK; HSP90AA1; RPS6KB1 ERK/MAPK Signaling PRKCE; ITGAM; ITGA5; HSPB1; IRAK1; PRKAA2; EIF2AK2; RAC1; RAP1A; TLN1; EIF4E; ELK1; GRK6; MAPK1; RAC2; PLK1; AKT2; PIK3CA; CDK8; CREB1; PRKCI; PTK2; FOS; RPS6KA4; PIK3CB; PPP2R1A; PIK3C3; MAPK8; MAPK3; ITGA1; ETS1; KRAS; MYCN; EIF4EBP1; PPARG; PRKCD; PRKAAI; MAPK9; SRC; CDK2; PPP2CA; PIM1; PIK3C2A; ITGB7; YWHAZ; PPP1CC; KSR1; PXN; RAF1; FYN; DYRK1A; ITGB1; MAP2K2; PAK4; PIK3R1; STAT3; PPP2R5C; MAP2K1; PAK3; ITGB3; ESR1; ITGA2; MYC; TTK; CSNK1A1; CRKL; BRAF; ATF4; PRKCA; SRF; STAT1; SGK Glucocorticoid Receptor RAC1; TAF4B; EP300; SMAD2; TRAF6; PCAF; ELK1; Signaling MAPK1; SMAD3; AKT2; IKBKB; NCOR2; UBE2I; PIK3CA; CREB1; FOS; HSPA5; NFKB2; BCL2; MAP3K14; STAT5B; PIK3CB; PIK3C3; MAPK8; BCL2L1; MAPK3; TSC22D3; MAPK10; NRIP1; KRAS; MAPK13; RELA; STAT5A; MAPK9; NOS2A; PBX1; NR3C1; PIK3C2A; CDKNIC; TRAF2; SERPINE1; NCOA3; MAPK14; TNF; RAF1; IKBKG; MAP3K7; CREBBP; CDKN1A; MAP2K2; JAK1; IL8; NCOA2; AKT1; JAK2; PIK3R1; CHUK; STAT3; MAP2K1; NFKB1; TGFBR1; ESR1; SMAD4; CEBPB; JUN; AR; AKT3; CCL2; MMP1; STAT1; IL6; HSP90AA1 Axonal Guidance PRKCE; ITGAM; ROCK1; ITGA5; CXCR4; ADAM12; Signaling IGF1; RAC1; RAP1A; EIF4E; PRKCZ; NRP1; NTRK2; ARHGEF7; SMO; ROCK2; MAPK1; PGF; RAC2; PTPN11; GNAS; AKT2; PIK3CA; ERBB2; PRKCI; PTK2; CFL1; GNAQ; PIK3CB; CXCL12; PIK3C3; WNT11; PRKD1; GNB2L1; ABL1; MAPK3; ITGA1; KRAS; RHOA; PRKCD; PIK3C2A; ITGB7; GLI2; PXN; VASP; RAF1; FYN; ITGB1; MAP2K2; PAK4; ADAM17; AKT1; PIK3R1; GLI1; WNT5A; ADAM10; MAP2K1; PAK3; ITGB3; CDC42; VEGFA; ITGA2; EPHA8; CRKL; RND1; GSK3B; AKT3; PRKCA Ephrin Receptor PRKCE; ITGAM; ROCK1; ITGA5; CXCR4; IRAK1; Signaling PRKAA2; EIF2AK2; RAC1; RAP1A; GRK6; ROCK2; MAPK1; PGF; RAC2; PTPN11; GNAS; PLK1; AKT2; DOK1; CDK8; CREB1; PTK2; CFL1; GNAQ; MAP3K14; CXCL12; MAPK8; GNB2L1; ABL1; MAPK3; ITGA1; KRAS; RHOA; PRKCD; PRKAA1; MAPK9; SRC; CDK2; PIM1; ITGB7; PXN; RAF1; FYN; DYRK1A; ITGB1; MAP2K2; PAK4; AKT1; JAK2; STAT3; ADAM10; MAP2K1; PAK3; ITGB3; CDC42; VEGFA; ITGA2; EPHA8; TTK; CSNK1A1; CRKL; BRAF; PTPN13; ATF4; AKT3; SGK Actin Cytoskeleton ACTN4; PRKCE; ITGAM; ROCK1; ITGA5; IRAK1; Signaling PRKAA2; EIF2AK2; RAC1; INS; ARHGEF7; GRK6; ROCK2; MAPK1; RAC2; PLK1; AKT2; PIK3CA; CDK8; PTK2; CFL1; PIK3CB; MYH9; DIAPH1; PIK3C3; MAPK8; F2R; MAPK3; SLC9A1; ITGA1; KRAS; RHOA; PRKCD; PRKAA1; MAPK9; CDK2; PIM1; PIK3C2A; ITGB7; PPP1CC; PXN; VIL2; RAF1; GSN; DYRK1A; ITGB1; MAP2K2; PAK4; PIP5K1A; PIK3R1; MAP2K1; PAK3; ITGB3; CDC42; APC; ITGA2; TTK; CSNKIA1; CRKL; BRAF; VAV3; SGK Huntington's Disease PRKCE; IGF1; EP300; RCOR1; PRKCZ; HDAC4; TGM2; Signaling MAPK1; CAPNS1; AKT2; EGFR; NCOR2; SP1; CAPN2; PIK3CA; HDAC5; CREB1; PRKCI; HSPA5; REST; GNAQ; PIK3CB; PIK3C3; MAPK8; IGF1R; PRKD1; GNB2L1; BCL2L1; CAPN1; MAPK3; CASP8; HDAC2; HDAC7A; PRKCD; HDAC11; MAPK9; HDAC9; PIK3C2A; HDAC3; TP53; CASP9; CREBBP; AKT1; PIK3R1; PDPK1; CASP1; APAF1; FRAP1; CASP2; JUN; BAX; ATF4; AKT3; PRKCA; CLTC; SGK; HDAC6; CASP3 Apoptosis Signaling PRKCE; ROCK1; BID; IRAK1; PRKAA2; EIF2AK2; BAK1; BIRC4; GRK6; MAPK1; CAPNS1; PLK1; AKT2; IKBKB; CAPN2; CDK8; FAS; NFKB2; BCL2; MAP3K14; MAPK8; BCL2L1; CAPN1; MAPK3; CASP8; KRAS; RELA; PRKCD; PRKAA1; MAPK9; CDK2; PIM1; TP53; TNF; RAF1; IKBKG; RELB; CASP9; DYRK1A; MAP2K2; CHUK; APAF1; MAP2K1; NFKB1; PAK3; LMNA; CASP2; BIRC2; TTK; CSNK1A1; BRAF; BAX; PRKCA; SGK; CASP3; BIRC3; PARP1 B Cell Receptor RAC1; PTEN; LYN; ELK1; MAPK1; RAC2; PTPN11; Signaling AKT2; IKBKB; PIK3CA; CREB1; SYK; NFKB2; CAMK2A; MAP3K14; PIK3CB; PIK3C3; MAPK8; BCL2L1; ABL1; MAPK3; ETS1; KRAS; MAPK13; RELA; PTPN6; MAPK9; EGR1; PIK3C2A; BTK; MAPK14; RAF1; IKBKG; RELB; MAP3K7; MAP2K2; AKT1; PIK3R1; CHUK; MAP2K1; NFKB1; CDC42; GSK3A; FRAP1; BCL6; BCL10; JUN; GSK3B; ATF4; AKT3; VAV3; RPS6KB1 Leukocyte Extravasation ACTN4; CD44; PRKCE; ITGAM; ROCK1; CXCR4; CYBA; Signaling RAC1; RAP1A; PRKCZ; ROCK2; RAC2; PTPN11; MMP14; PIK3CA; PRKCI; PTK2; PIK3CB; CXCL12; PIK3C3; MAPK8; PRKD1; ABL1; MAPK10; CYBB; MAPK13; RHOA; PRKCD; MAPK9; SRC; PIK3C2A; BTK; MAPK14; NOX1; PXN; VIL2; VASP; ITGB1; MAP2K2; CTNND1; PIK3R1; CTNNB1; CLDN1; CDC42; F11R; ITK; CRKL; VAV3; CTTN; PRKCA; MMP1; MMP9 Integrin Signaling ACTN4; ITGAM; ROCK1; ITGA5; RAC1; PTEN; RAP1A; TLN1; ARHGEF7; MAPK1; RAC2; CAPNS1; AKT2; CAPN2; PIK3CA; PTK2; PIK3CB; PIK3C3; MAPK8; CAV1; CAPN1; ABL1; MAPK3; ITGA1; KRAS; RHOA; SRC; PIK3C2A; ITGB7; PPP1CC; ILK; PXN; VASP; RAF1; FYN; ITGB1; MAP2K2; PAK4; AKT1; PIK3R1; TNK2; MAP2K1; PAK3; ITGB3; CDC42; RND3; ITGA2; CRKL; BRAF; GSK3B; AKT3 Acute Phase Response IRAK1; SOD2; MYD88; TRAF6; ELK1; MAPK1; PTPN11; Signaling AKT2; IKBKB; PIK3CA; FOS; NFKB2; MAP3K14; PIK3CB; MAPK8; RIPK1; MAPK3; IL6ST; KRAS; MAPK13; IL6R; RELA; SOCS1; MAPK9; FTL; NR3C1; TRAF2; SERPINE1; MAPK14; TNF; RAF1; PDK1; IKBKG; RELB; MAP3K7; MAP2K2; AKT1; JAK2; PIK3R1; CHUK; STAT3; MAP2K1; NFKB1; FRAP1; CEBPB; JUN; AKT3; IL1R1; IL6 PTEN Signaling ITGAM; ITGA5; RAC1; PTEN; PRKCZ; BCL2L11; MAPK1; RAC2; AKT2; EGFR; IKBKB; CBL; PIK3CA; CDKN1B; PTK2; NFKB2; BCL2; PIK3CB; BCL2L1; MAPK3; ITGA1; KRAS; ITGB7; ILK; PDGFRB; INSR; RAF1; IKBKG; CASP9; CDKN1A; ITGB1; MAP2K2; AKT1; PIK3R1; CHUK; PDGFRA; PDPK1; MAP2K1; NFKB1; ITGB3; CDC42; CCND1; GSK3A; ITGA2; GSK3B; AKT3; FOXO1; CASP3; RPS6KB1 p53 Signaling PTEN; EP300; BBC3; PCAF; FASN; BRCA1; GADD45A; BIRC5; AKT2; PIK3CA; CHEK1; TP53INP1; BCL2; PIK3CB; PIK3C3; MAPK8; THBS1; ATR; BCL2L1; E2F1; PMAIP1; CHEK2; TNFRSF10B; TP73; RB1; HDAC9; CDK2; PIK3C2A; MAPK14; TP53; LRDD; CDKN1A; HIPK2; AKT1; PIK3R1; RRM2B; APAF1; CTNNB1; SIRT1; CCND1; PRKDC; ATM; SFN; CDKN2A; JUN; SNAI2; GSK3B; BAX; AKT3 Aryl Hydrocarbon HSPB1; EP300; FASN; TGM2; RXRA; MAPK1; NQO1; Receptor NCOR2; SP1; ARNT; CDKN1B; FOS; CHEK1; Signaling SMARCA4; NFKB2; MAPK8; ALDH1A1; ATR; E2F1; MAPK3; NRIP1; CHEK2; RELA; TP73; GSTP1; RB1; SRC; CDK2; AHR; NFE2L2; NCOA3; TP53; TNF; CDKN1A; NCOA2; APAF1; NFKB1; CCND1; ATM; ESR1; CDKN2A; MYC; JUN; ESR2; BAX; IL6; CYP1B1; HSP90AA1 Xenobiotic Metabolism PRKCE; EP300; PRKCZ; RXRA; MAPK1; NQO1; Signaling NCOR2; PIK3CA; ARNT; PRKCI; NFKB2; CAMK2A; PIK3CB; PPP2R1A; PIK3C3; MAPK8; PRKD1; ALDH1A1; MAPK3; NRIP1; KRAS; MAPK13; PRKCD; GSTP1; MAPK9; NOS2A; ABCB1; AHR; PPP2CA; FTL; NFE2L2; PIK3C2A; PPARGC1A; MAPK14; TNF; RAF1; CREBBP; MAP2K2; PIK3R1; PPP2R5C; MAP2K1; NFKB1; KEAP1; PRKCA; EIF2AK3; IL6; CYP1B1; HSP90AA1 SAPK/JNK Signaling PRKCE; IRAK1; PRKAA2; EIF2AK2; RAC1; ELK1; GRK6; MAPK1; GADD45A; RAC2; PLK1; AKT2; PIK3CA; FADD; CDK8; PIK3CB; PIK3C3; MAPK8; RIPK1; GNB2L1; IRS1; MAPK3; MAPK10; DAXX; KRAS; PRKCD; PRKAA1; MAPK9; CDK2; PIM1; PIK3C2A; TRAF2; TP53; LCK; MAP3K7; DYRK1A; MAP2K2; PIK3R1; MAP2K1; PAK3; CDC42; JUN; TTK; CSNK1A1; CRKL; BRAF; SGK PPAr/RXR Signaling PRKAA2; EP300; INS; SMAD2; TRAF6; PPARA; FASN; RXRA; MAPK1; SMAD3; GNAS; IKBKB; NCOR2; ABCA1; GNAQ; NFKB2; MAP3K14; STAT5B; MAPK8; IRS1; MAPK3; KRAS; RELA; PRKAA1; PPARGC1A; NCOA3; MAPK14; INSR; RAF1; IKBKG; RELB; MAP3K7; CREBBP; MAP2K2; JAK2; CHUK; MAP2K1; NFKB1; TGFBR1; SMAD4; JUN; IL1R1; PRKCA; IL6; HSP90AA1; ADIPOQ NF-KB Signaling IRAK1; EIF2AK2; EP300; INS; MYD88; PRKCZ; TRAF6; TBK1; AKT2; EGFR; IKBKB; PIK3CA; BTRC; NFKB2; MAP3K14; PIK3CB; PIK3C3; MAPK8; RIPK1; HDAC2; KRAS; RELA; PIK3C2A; TRAF2; TLR4; PDGFRB; TNF; INSR; LCK; IKBKG; RELB; MAP3K7; CREBBP; AKT1; PIK3R1; CHUK; PDGFRA; NFKB1; TLR2; BCL10; GSK3B; AKT3; TNFAIP3; IL1R1 Neuregulin Signaling ERBB4; PRKCE; ITGAM; ITGA5; PTEN; PRKCZ; ELK1; MAPK1; PTPN11; AKT2; EGFR; ERBB2; PRKCI; CDKN1B; STAT5B; PRKD1; MAPK3; ITGA1; KRAS; PRKCD; STAT5A; SRC; ITGB7; RAF1; ITGB1; MAP2K2; ADAM17; AKT1; PIK3R1; PDPK1; MAP2K1; ITGB3; EREG; FRAP1; PSEN1; ITGA2; MYC; NRG1; CRKL; AKT3; PRKCA; HSP90AA1; RPS6KB1 Wnt & Beta catenin CD44; EP300; LRP6; DVL3; CSNK1E; GJA1; SMO; Signaling AKT2; PIN1; CDH1; BTRC; GNAQ; MARK2; PPP2R1A; WNT11; SRC; DKK1; PPP2CA; SOX6; SFRP2; ILK; LEF1; SOX9; TP53; MAP3K7; CREBBP; TCF7L2; AKT1; PPP2R5C; WNT5A; LRP5; CTNNB1; TGFBR1; CCND1; GSK3A; DVL1; APC; CDKN2A; MYC; CSNK1A1; GSK3B; AKT3; SOX2 Insulin Receptor PTEN; INS; EIF4E; PTPN1; PRKCZ; MAPK1; TSC1; Signaling PTPN11; AKT2; CBL; PIK3CA; PRKCI; PIK3CB; PIK3C3; MAPK8; IRS1; MAPK3; TSC2; KRAS; EIF4EBP1; SLC2A4; PIK3C2A; PPP1CC; INSR; RAF1; FYN; MAP2K2; JAK1; AKT1; JAK2; PIK3R1; PDPK1; MAP2K1; GSK3A; FRAP1; CRKL; GSK3B; AKT3; FOXO1; SGK; RPS6KB1 IL-6 Signaling HSPB1; TRAF6; MAPKAPK2; ELK1; MAPK1; PTPN11; IKBKB; FOS; NFKB2; MAP3K14; MAPK8; MAPK3; MAPK10; IL6ST; KRAS; MAPK13; IL6R; RELA; SOCS1; MAPK9; ABCB1; TRAF2; MAPK14; TNF; RAF1; IKBKG; RELB; MAP3K7; MAP2K2; IL8; JAK2; CHUK; STAT3; MAP2K1; NFKB1; CEBPB; JUN; IL1R1; SRF; IL6 Hepatic Cholestasis PRKCE; IRAK1; INS; MYD88; PRKCZ; TRAF6; PPARA; RXRA; IKBKB; PRKCI; NFKB2; MAP3K14; MAPK8; PRKD1; MAPK10; RELA; PRKCD; MAPK9; ABCB1; TRAF2; TLR4; TNF; INSR; IKBKG; RELB; MAP3K7; IL8; CHUK; NR1H2; TJP2; NFKB1; ESR1; SREBF1; FGFR4; JUN; IL1R1; PRKCA; IL6 IGF-1 Signaling IGF1; PRKCZ; ELK1; MAPK1; PTPN11; NEDD4; AKT2; PIK3CA; PRKCI; PTK2; FOS; PIK3CB; PIK3C3; MAPK8; IGF1R; IRS1; MAPK3; IGFBP7; KRAS; PIK3C2A; YWHAZ; PXN; RAF1; CASP9; MAP2K2; AKT1; PIK3R1; PDPK1; MAP2K1; IGFBP2; SFN; JUN; CYR61; AKT3; FOXO1; SRF; CTGF; RPS6KB1 NRF2-mediated PRKCE; EP300; SOD2; PRKCZ; MAPK1; SQSTM1; Oxidative NQO1; PIK3CA; PRKCI; FOS; PIK3CB; PIK3C3; MAPK8; Stress Response PRKD1; MAPK3; KRAS; PRKCD; GSTP1; MAPK9; FTL; NFE2L2; PIK3C2A; MAPK14; RAF1; MAP3K7; CREBBP; MAP2K2; AKT1; PIK3R1; MAP2K1; PPIB; JUN; KEAP1; GSK3B; ATF4; PRKCA; EIF2AK3; HSP90AA1 Hepatic Fibrosis/Hepatic EDN1; IGF1; KDR; FLT1; SMAD2; FGFR1; MET; PGF; Stellate Cell Activation SMAD3; EGFR; FAS; CSF1; NFKB2; BCL2; MYH9; IGF1R; IL6R; RELA; TLR4; PDGFRB; TNF; RELB; IL8; PDGFRA; NFKB1; TGFBR1; SMAD4; VEGFA; BAX; IL1R1; CCL2; HGF; MMP1; STAT1; IL6; CTGF; MMP9 PPAR Signaling EP300; INS; TRAF6; PPARA; RXRA; MAPK1; IKBKB; NCOR2; FOS; NFKB2; MAP3K14; STAT5B; MAPK3; NRIP1; KRAS; PPARG; RELA; STAT5A; TRAF2; PPARGC1A; PDGFRB; TNF; INSR; RAF1; IKBKG; RELB; MAP3K7; CREBBP; MAP2K2; CHUK; PDGFRA; MAP2K1; NFKB1; JUN; IL1R1; HSP90AA1 Fc Epsilon RI Signaling PRKCE; RAC1; PRKCZ; LYN; MAPK1; RAC2; PTPN11; AKT2; PIK3CA; SYK; PRKCI; PIK3CB; PIK3C3; MAPK8; PRKD1; MAPK3; MAPK10; KRAS; MAPK13; PRKCD; MAPK9; PIK3C2A; BTK; MAPK14; TNF; RAF1; FYN; MAP2K2; AKT1; PIK3R1; PDPK1; MAP2K1; AKT3; VAV3; PRKCA G-Protein Coupled PRKCE; RAP1A; RGS16; MAPK1; GNAS; AKT2; IKBKB; Receptor Signaling PIK3CA; CREB1; GNAQ; NFKB2; CAMK2A; PIK3CB; PIK3C3; MAPK3; KRAS; RELA; SRC; PIK3C2A; RAF1; IKBKG; RELB; FYN; MAP2K2; AKT1; PIK3R1; CHUK; PDPK1; STAT3; MAP2K1; NFKB1; BRAF; ATF4; AKT3; PRKCA Inositol Phosphate PRKCE; IRAK1; PRKAA2; EIF2AK2; PTEN; GRK6; Metabolism MAPK1; PLK1; AKT2; PIK3CA; CDK8; PIK3CB; PIK3C3; MAPK8; MAPK3; PRKCD; PRKAA1; MAPK9; CDK2; PIM1; PIK3C2A; DYRK1A; MAP2K2; PIP5K1A; PIK3R1; MAP2K1; PAK3; ATM; TTK; CSNK1A1; BRAF; SGK PDGF Signaling EIF2AK2; ELK1; ABL2; MAPK1; PIK3CA; FOS; PIK3CB; PIK3C3; MAPK8; CAV1; ABL1; MAPK3; KRAS; SRC; PIK3C2A; PDGFRB; RAF1; MAP2K2; JAK1; JAK2; PIK3R1; PDGFRA; STAT3; SPHK1; MAP2K1; MYC; JUN; CRKL; PRKCA; SRF; STAT1; SPHK2 VEGF Signaling ACTN4; ROCK1; KDR; FLT1; ROCK2; MAPK1; PGF; AKT2; PIK3CA; ARNT; PTK2; BCL2; PIK3CB; PIK3C3; BCL2L1; MAPK3; KRAS; HIF1A; NOS3; PIK3C2A; PXN; RAF1; MAP2K2; ELAVL1; AKT1; PIK3R1; MAP2K1; SFN; VEGFA; AKT3; FOXO1; PRKCA Natural Killer Cell PRKCE; RAC1; PRKCZ; MAPK1; RAC2; PTPN11; Signaling KIR2DL3; AKT2; PIK3CA; SYK; PRKCI; PIK3CB; PIK3C3; PRKD1; MAPK3; KRAS; PRKCD; PTPN6; PIK3C2A; LCK; RAF1; FYN; MAP2K2; PAK4; AKT1; PIK3R1; MAP2K1; PAK3; AKT3; VAV3; PRKCA Cell Cycle: G1/S HDAC4; SMAD3; SUV39H1; HDAC5; CDKN1B; BTRC; Checkpoint Regulation ATR; ABL1; E2F1; HDAC2; HDAC7A; RB1; HDAC11; HDAC9; CDK2; E2F2; HDAC3; TP53; CDKN1A; CCND1; E2F4; ATM; RBL2; SMAD4; CDKN2A; MYC; NRG1; GSK3B; RBL1; HDAC6 T Cell Receptor RAC1; ELK1; MAPK1; IKBKB; CBL; PIK3CA; FOS; Signaling NFKB2; PIK3CB; PIK3C3; MAPK8; MAPK3; KRAS; RELA; PIK3C2A; BTK; LCK; RAF1; IKBKG; RELB; FYN; MAP2K2; PIK3R1; CHUK; MAP2K1; NFKB1; ITK; BCL10; JUN; VAV3 Death Receptor Signaling CRADD; HSPB1; BID; BIRC4; TBK1; IKBKB; FADD; FAS; NFKB2; BCL2; MAP3K14; MAPK8; RIPK1; CASP8; DAXX; TNFRSF10B; RELA; TRAF2; TNF; IKBKG; RELB; CASP9; CHUK; APAF1; NFKB1; CASP2; BIRC2; CASP3; BIRC3 FGF Signaling RAC1; FGFR1; MET; MAPKAPK2; MAPK1; PTPN11; AKT2; PIK3CA; CREB1; PIK3CB; PIK3C3; MAPK8; MAPK3; MAPK13; PTPN6; PIK3C2A; MAPK14; RAF1; AKT1; PIK3R1; STAT3; MAP2K1; FGFR4; CRKL; ATF4; AKT3; PRKCA; HGF GM-CSF Signaling LYN; ELK1; MAPK1; PTPN11; AKT2; PIK3CA; CAMK2A; STAT5B; PIK3CB; PIK3C3; GNB2L1; BCL2L1; MAPK3; ETS1; KRAS; RUNX1; PIM1; PIK3C2A; RAF1; MAP2K2; AKT1; JAK2; PIK3R1; STAT3; MAP2K1; CCND1; AKT3; STAT1 Amyotrophic Lateral BID; IGF1; RAC1; BIRC4; PGF; CAPNS1; CAPN2; Sclerosis Signaling PIK3CA; BCL2; PIK3CB; PIK3C3; BCL2L1; CAPN1; PIK3C2A; TP53; CASP9; PIK3R1; RAB5A; CASP1; APAF1; VEGFA; BIRC2; BAX; AKT3; CASP3; BIRC3 JAK/Stat Signaling PTPN1; MAPK1; PTPN11; AKT2; PIK3CA; STAT5B; PIK3CB; PIK3C3; MAPK3; KRAS; SOCS1; STAT5A; PTPN6; PIK3C2A; RAF1; CDKN1A; MAP2K2; JAK1; AKT1; JAK2; PIK3R1; STAT3; MAP2K1; FRAP1; AKT3; STAT1 Nicotinate and PRKCE; IRAK1; PRKAA2; EIF2AK2; GRK6; MAPK1; Nicotinamide PLK1; AKT2; CDK8; MAPK8; MAPK3; PRKCD; PRKAA1; Metabolism PBEF1; MAPK9; CDK2; PIM1; DYRK1A; MAP2K2; MAP2K1; PAK3; NT5E; TTK; CSNK1A1; BRAF; SGK Chemokine Signaling CXCR4; ROCK2; MAPK1; PTK2; FOS; CFL1; GNAQ; CAMK2A; CXCL12; MAPK8; MAPK3; KRAS; MAPK13; RHOA; CCR3; SRC; PPP1CC; MAPK14; NOX1; RAF1; MAP2K2; MAP2K1; JUN; CCL2; PRKCA IL-2 Signaling ELK1; MAPK1; PTPN11; AKT2; PIK3CA; SYK; FOS; STAT5B; PIK3CB; PIK3C3; MAPK8; MAPK3; KRAS; SOCS1; STAT5A; PIK3C2A; LCK; RAF1; MAP2K2; JAK1; AKT1; PIK3R1; MAP2K1; JUN; AKT3 Synaptic Long Term PRKCE; IGF1; PRKCZ; PRDX6; LYN; MAPK1; GNAS; Depression PRKCI; GNAQ; PPP2R1A; IGF1R; PRKD1; MAPK3; KRAS; GRN; PRKCD; NOS3; NOS2A; PPP2CA; YWHAZ; RAF1; MAP2K2; PPP2R5C; MAP2K1; PRKCA Estrogen Receptor TAF4B; EP300; CARMI; PCAF; MAPK1; NCOR2; Signaling SMARCA4; MAPK3; NRIP1; KRAS; SRC; NR3C1; HDAC3; PPARGC1A; RBM9; NCOA3; RAF1; CREBBP; MAP2K2; NCOA2; MAP2K1; PRKDC; ESR1; ESR2 Protein Ubiquitination TRAF6; SMURF1; BIRC4; BRCA1; UCHL1; NEDD4; Pathway CBL; UBE2I; BTRC; HSPA5; USP7; USP10; FBXW7; USP9X; STUB1; USP22; B2M; BIRC2; PARK2; USP8; USP1; VHL; HSP90AA1; BIRC3 IL-10 Signaling TRAF6; CCR1; ELK1; IKBKB; SP1; FOS; NFKB2; MAP3K14; MAPK8; MAPK13; RELA; MAPK14; TNF; IKBKG; RELB; MAP3K7; JAK1; CHUK; STAT3; NFKB1; JUN; IL1R1; IL6 VDR/RXR Activation PRKCE; EP300; PRKCZ; RXRA; GADD45A; HES1; NCOR2; SP1; PRKCI; CDKN1B; PRKD1; PRKCD; RUNX2; KLF4; YY1; NCOA3; CDKN1A; NCOA2; SPP1; LRP5; CEBPB; FOXO1; PRKCA TGF-beta Signaling EP300; SMAD2; SMURF1; MAPK1; SMAD3; SMAD1; FOS; MAPK8; MAPK3; KRAS; MAPK9; RUNX2; SERPINE1; RAF1; MAP3K7; CREBBP; MAP2K2; MAP2K1; TGFBR1; SMAD4; JUN; SMAD5 Toll-like Receptor IRAK1; EIF2AK2; MYD88; TRAF6; PPARA; ELK1; Signaling IKBKB; FOS; NFKB2; MAP3K14; MAPK8; MAPK13; RELA; TLR4; MAPK14; IKBKG; RELB; MAP3K7; CHUK; NFKB1; TLR2; JUN p38 MAPK Signaling HSPB1; IRAK1; TRAF6; MAPKAPK2; ELK1; FADD; FAS; CREB1; DDIT3; RPS6KA4; DAXX; MAPK13; TRAF2; MAPK14; TNF; MAP3K7; TGFBR1; MYC; ATF4; IL1R1; SRF; STAT1 Neurotrophin/TRK NTRK2; MAPK1; PTPN11; PIK3CA; CREB1; FOS; Signaling PIK3CB; PIK3C3; MAPK8; MAPK3; KRAS; PIK3C2A; RAF1; MAP2K2; AKT1; PIK3R1; PDPK1; MAP2K1; CDC42; JUN; ATF4 FXR/RXR Activation INS; PPARA; FASN; RXRA; AKT2; SDC1; MAPK8; APOB; MAPK10; PPARG; MTTP; MAPK9; PPARGC1A; TNF; CREBBP; AKT1; SREBF1; FGFR4; AKT3; FOXO1 Synaptic Long Term PRKCE; RAP1A; EP300; PRKCZ; MAPK1; CREB1; Potentiation PRKCI; GNAQ; CAMK2A; PRKD1; MAPK3; KRAS; PRKCD; PPP1CC; RAF1; CREBBP; MAP2K2; MAP2K1; ATF4; PRKCA Calcium Signaling RAP1A; EP300; HDAC4; MAPK1; HDAC5; CREB1; CAMK2A; MYH9; MAPK3; HDAC2; HDAC7A; HDAC11; HDAC9; HDAC3; CREBBP; CALR; CAMKK2; ATF4; HDAC6 EGF Signaling ELK1; MAPK1; EGFR; PIK3CA; FOS; PIK3CB; PIK3C3; MAPK8; MAPK3; PIK3C2A; RAF1; JAK1; PIK3R1; STAT3; MAP2K1; JUN; PRKCA; SRF; STAT1 Hypoxia Signaling in the EDN1; PTEN; EP300; NQO1; UBE2I; CREB1; ARNT; Cardiovascular System HIF1A; SLC2A4; NOS3; TP53; LDHA; AKT1; ATM; VEGFA; JUN; ATF4; VHL; HSP90AA1 LPS/IL-1 Mediated IRAK1; MYD88; TRAF6; PPARA; RXRA; ABCA1; Inhibition MAPK8; ALDH1A1; GSTP1; MAPK9; ABCB1; TRAF2; of RXR Function TLR4; TNF; MAP3K7; NR1H2; SREBF1; JUN; IL1R1 LXR/RXR Activation FASN; RXRA; NCOR2; ABCA1; NFKB2; IRF3; RELA; NOS2A; TLR4; TNF; RELB; LDLR; NR1H2; NFKB1; SREBF1; IL1R1; CCL2; IL6; MMP9 Amyloid Processing PRKCE; CSNK1E; MAPK1; CAPNS1; AKT2; CAPN2; CAPN1; MAPK3; MAPK13; MAPT; MAPK14; AKT1; PSEN1; CSNK1A1; GSK3B; AKT3; APP IL-4 Signaling AKT2; PIK3CA; PIK3CB; PIK3C3; IRS1; KRAS; SOCS1; PTPN6; NR3C1; PIK3C2A; JAK1; AKT1; JAK2; PIK3R1; FRAP1; AKT3; RPS6KB1 Cell Cycle: G2/M DNA EP300; PCAF; BRCA1; GADD45A; PLK1; BTRC; Damage Checkpoint CHEK1; ATR; CHEK2; YWHAZ; TP53; CDKN1A; Regulation PRKDC; ATM; SFN; CDKN2A Nitric Oxide Signaling in KDR; FLT1; PGF; AKT2; PIK3CA; PIK3CB; PIK3C3; the CAV1; PRKCD; NOS3; PIK3C2A; AKT1; PIK3R1; Cardiovascular System VEGFA; AKT3; HSP90AA1 Purine Metabolism NME2; SMARCA4; MYH9; RRM2; ADAR; EIF2AK4; PKM2; ENTPD1; RAD51; RRM2B; TJP2; RAD51C; NT5E; POLD1; NME1 cAMP-mediated RAP1A; MAPK1; GNAS; CREB1; CAMK2A; MAPK3; Signaling SRC; RAF1; MAP2K2; STAT3; MAP2K1; BRAF; ATF4 Mitochondrial SOD2; MAPK8; CASP8; MAPK10; MAPK9; CASP9; Dysfunction PARK7; PSEN1; PARK2; APP; CASP3 Notch Signaling HES1; JAG1; NUMB; NOTCH4; ADAM17; NOTCH2; PSEN1; NOTCH3; NOTCH1; DLL4 Endoplasmic Reticulum HSPA5; MAPK8; XBP1; TRAF2; ATF6; CASP9; ATF4; Stress Pathway EIF2AK3; CASP3 Pyrimidine Metabolism NME2; AICDA; RRM2; EIF2AK4; ENTPD1; RRM2B; NT5E; POLD1; NME1 Parkinson's Signaling UCHL1; MAPK8; MAPK13; MAPK14; CASP9; PARK7; PARK2; CASP3 Cardiac & Beta GNAS; GNAQ; PPP2R1A; GNB2L1; PPP2CA; PPP1CC; Adrenergic Signaling PPP2R5C Glycolysis/Gluconeogenesis HK2; GCK; GPI; ALDH1A1; PKM2; LDHA; HK1 Interferon Signaling IRF1; SOCS1; JAK1; JAK2; IFITM1; STAT1; IFIT3 Sonic Hedgehog ARRB2; SMO; GLI2; DYRK1A; GLI1; GSK3B; DYRK1B Signaling Glycerophospholipid PLD1; GRN; GPAM; YWHAZ; SPHK1; SPHK2 Metabolism Phospholipid PRDX6; PLD1; GRN; YWHAZ; SPHK1; SPHK2 Degradation Tryptophan Metabolism SIAH2; PRMT5; NEDD4; ALDH1A1; CYP1B1; SIAH1 Lysine Degradation SUV39H1; EHMT2; NSD1; SETD7; PPP2R5C Nucleotide Excision ERCC5; ERCC4; XPA; XPC; ERCC1 Repair Pathway Starch and Sucrose UCHL1; HK2; GCK; GPI; HK1 Metabolism Aminosugars Metabolism NQO1; HK2; GCK; HK1 Arachidonic Acid PRDX6; GRN; YWHAZ; CYP1B1 Metabolism Circadian Rhythm CSNK1E; CREB1; ATF4; NR1D1 Signaling Coagulation System BDKRB1; F2R; SERPINE1; F3 Dopamine Receptor PPP2R1A; PPP2CA; PPP1CC; PPP2R5C Signaling Glutathione Metabolism IDH2; GSTP1; ANPEP; IDH1 Glycerolipid Metabolism ALDH1A1; GPAM; SPHK1; SPHK2 Linoleic Acid PRDX6; GRN; YWHAZ; CYP1B1 Metabolism Methionine Metabolism DNMT1; DNMT3B; AHCY; DNMT3A Pyruvate Metabolism GLO1; ALDH1A1; PKM2; LDHA Arginine and Proline ALDH1A1; NOS3; NOS2A Metabolism Eicosanoid Signaling PRDX6; GRN; YWHAZ Fructose and Mannose HK2; GCK; HK1 Metabolism Galactose Metabolism HK2; GCK; HK1 Stilbene, Coumarine and PRDX6; PRDX1; TYR Lignin Biosynthesis Antigen Presentation CALR; B2M Pathway Biosynthesis of Steroids NQO1; DHCR7 Butanoate Metabolism ALDH1A1; NLGN1 Citrate Cycle IDH2; IDH1 Fatty Acid Metabolism ALDH1A1; CYP1B1 Glycerophospholipid PRDX6; CHKA Metabolism Histidine Metabolism PRMT5; ALDH1A1 Inositol Metabolism ERO1L; APEX1 Metabolism of GSTP1; CYP1B1 Xenobiotics by Cytochrome p450 Methane Metabolism PRDX6; PRDX1 Phenylalanine PRDX6; PRDX1 Metabolism Propanoate Metabolism ALDH1A1; LDHA Selenoamino Acid PRMT5; AHCY Metabolism Sphingolipid Metabolism SPHK1; SPHK2 Aminophosphonate PRMT5 Metabolism Androgen and Estrogen PRMT5 Metabolism Ascorbate and Aldarate ALDH1A1 Metabolism Bile Acid Biosynthesis ALDH1A1 Cysteine Metabolism LDHA Fatty Acid Biosynthesis FASN Glutamate Receptor GNB2L1 Signaling NRF2-mediated PRDX1 Oxidative Stress Response Pentose Phosphate GPI Pathway Pentose and Glucuronate UCHL1 Interconversions Retinol Metabolism ALDH1A1 Riboflavin Metabolism TYR Tyrosine Metabolism PRMT5, TYR Ubiquinone Biosynthesis PRMT5 Valine, Leucine and ALDH1A1 Isoleucine Degradation Glycine, Serine and CHKA Threonine Metabolism Lysine Degradation ALDH1A1 Pain/Taste TRPM5; TRPA1 Pain TRPM7; TRPC5; TRPC6; TRPC1; Cnr1; cnr2; Grk2; Trpa1; Pomc; Cgrp; Crf; Pka; Era; Nr2b; TRPM5; Prkaca; Prkacb; Prkar1a; Prkar2a Mitochondrial Function AIF; CytC; SMAC (Diablo); Aifm-1; Aifm-2 Developmental BMP-4; Chordin (Chrd); Noggin (Nog); WNT (Wnt2; Neurology Wnt2b; Wnt3a; Wnt4; Wnt5a; Wnt6; Wnt7b; Wnt8b; Wnt9a; Wnt9b; Wnt10a; Wnt10b; Wnt16); beta-catenin; Dkk-1; Frizzled related proteins; Otx-2; Gbx2; FGF-8; Reelin; Dab1; unc-86 (Pou4f1 or Brn3a); Numb; Reln

Embodiments of the invention also relate to methods and compositions related to knocking out genes, amplifying genes and repairing particular mutations associated with DNA repeat instability and neurological disorders (Robert D. Wells, Tetsuo Ashizawa, Genetic Instabilities and Neurological Diseases, Second Edition, Academic Press, Oct. 13, 2011—Medical). Specific aspects of tandem repeat sequences have been found to be responsible for more than twenty human diseases (New insights into repeat instability: role of RNA⋅DNA hybrids. McIvor E I, Polak U, Napierala M. RNA Biol. 2010 September-October; 7(5):551-8). The CRISPR-Cas system may be harnessed to correct these defects of genomic instability.

A further aspect of the invention relates to utilizing the CRISPR-Cas system for correcting defects in the EMP2A and EMP2B genes that have been identified to be associated with Lafora disease. Lafora disease is an autosomal recessive condition which is characterized by progressive myoclonus epilepsy which may start as epileptic seizures in adolescence. A few cases of the disease may be caused by mutations in genes yet to be identified. The disease causes seizures, muscle spasms, difficulty walking, dementia, and eventually death. There is currently no therapy that has proven effective against disease progression. Other genetic abnormalities associated with epilepsy may also be targeted by the CRISPR-Cas system and the underlying genetics is further described in Genetics of Epilepsy and Genetic Epilepsies, edited by Giuliano Avanzini, Jeffrey L. Noebels, Mariani Foundation Paediatric Neurology:20; 2009).

In yet another aspect of the invention, the CRISPR-Cas system may be used to correct ocular defects that arise from several genetic mutations further described in Genetic Diseases of the Eye, Second Edition, edited by Elias I. Traboulsi, Oxford University Press, 2012.

Several further aspects of the invention relate to correcting defects associated with a wide range of genetic diseases which are further described on the website of the National Institutes of Health under the topic subsection Genetic Disorders (website at health.nih.gov/topic/GeneticDisorders). The genetic brain diseases may include but are not limited to Adrenoleukodystrophy, Agenesis of the Corpus Callosum, Aicardi Syndrome, Alpers' Disease, Alzheimer's Disease, Barth Syndrome, Batten Disease, CADASIL, Cerebellar Degeneration, Fabry's Disease, Gerstmann-Straussler-Scheinker Disease, Huntington's Disease and other Triplet Repeat Disorders, Leigh's Disease, Lesch-Nyhan Syndrome, Menkes Disease, Mitochondrial Myopathies and NINDS Colpocephaly. These diseases are further described on the website of the National Institutes of Health under the subsection Genetic Brain Disorders.

In some embodiments, the condition may be neoplasia. In some embodiments, where the condition is neoplasia, the genes to be targeted are any of those listed in Table A (in this case PTEN asn so forth). In some embodiments, the condition may be Age-related Macular Degeneration. In some embodiments, the condition may be a Schizophrenic Disorder. In some embodiments, the condition may be a Trinucleotide Repeat Disorder. In some embodiments, the condition may be Fragile X Syndrome. In some embodiments, the condition may be a Secretase Related Disorder. In some embodiments, the condition may be a Prion-related disorder. In some embodiments, the condition may be ALS. In some embodiments, the condition may be a drug addiction. In some embodiments, the condition may be Autism. In some embodiments, the condition may be Alzheimer's Disease. In some embodiments, the condition may be inflammation. In some embodiments, the condition may be Parkinson's Disease.

Examples of proteins associated with Parkinson's disease include but are not limited to α-synuclein, DJ-1, LRRK2, PINK1, Parkin, UCHL1, Synphilin-1, and NURR1.

Examples of addiction-related proteins may include ABAT for example.

Examples of inflammation-related proteins may include the monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP1) encoded by the Ccr2 gene, the C-C chemokine receptor type 5 (CCR5) encoded by the Ccr5 gene, the IgG receptor IIB (FCGR2b, also termed CD32) encoded by the Fcgr2b gene, or the Fc epsilon R1 g (FCER1 g) protein encoded by the Fcer1 g gene, for example.

Examples of cardiovascular diseases associated proteins may include IL1B (interleukin 1, beta), XDH (xanthine dehydrogenase), TP53 (tumor protein p53), PTGIS (prostaglandin 12 (prostacyclin) synthase), MB (myoglobin), IL4 (interleukin 4), ANGPT1 (angiopoietin 1), ABCG8 (ATP-binding cassette, sub-family G (WHITE), member 8), or CTSK (cathepsin K), for example.

Examples of Alzheimer's disease associated proteins may include the very low density lipoprotein receptor protein (VLDLR) encoded by the VLDLR gene, the ubiquitin-like modifier activating enzyme 1 (UBA1) encoded by the UBA1 gene, or the NEDD8-activating enzyme E1 catalytic subunit protein (UBE1C) encoded by the UBA3 gene, for example.

Examples of proteins associated Autism Spectrum Disorder may include the benzodiazapine receptor (peripheral) associated protein 1 (BZRAP1) encoded by the BZRAP1 gene, the AF4/FMR2 family member 2 protein (AFF2) encoded by the AFF2 gene (also termed MFR2), the fragile X mental retardation autosomal homolog 1 protein (FXR1) encoded by the FXR1 gene, or the fragile X mental retardation autosomal homolog 2 protein (FXR2) encoded by the FXR2 gene, for example.

Examples of proteins associated Macular Degeneration may include the ATP-binding cassette, sub-family A (ABC1) member 4 protein (ABCA4) encoded by the ABCR gene, the apolipoprotein E protein (APOE) encoded by the APOE gene, or the chemokine (C-C motif) Ligand 2 protein (CCL2) encoded by the CCL2 gene, for example.

Examples of proteins associated Schizophrenia may include NRG1, ErbB4, CPLX1, TPH1, TPH2, NRXN1, GSK3A, BDNF, DISC1, GSK3B, and combinations thereof.

Examples of proteins involved in tumor suppression may include ATM (ataxia telangiectasia mutated), ATR (ataxia telangiectasia and Rad3 related), EGFR (epidermal growth factor receptor), ERBB2 (v-erb-b2 erythroblastic leukemia viral oncogene homolog 2), ERBB3 (v-erb-b2 erythroblastic leukemia viral oncogene homolog 3), ERBB4 (v-erb-b2 erythroblastic leukemia viral oncogene homolog 4), Notch 1, Notch2, Notch 3, or Notch 4, for example.

Examples of proteins associated with a secretase disorder may include PSENEN (presenilin enhancer 2 homolog (C. elegans)), CTSB (cathepsin B), PSEN1 (presenilin 1), APP (amyloid beta (A4) precursor protein), APH1B (anterior pharynx defective 1 homolog B (C. elegans)), PSEN2 (presenilin 2 (Alzheimer disease 4)), or BACE1 (beta-site APP-cleaving enzyme 1), for example.

Examples of proteins associated with Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis may include SOD1 (superoxide dismutase 1), ALS2 (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis 2), FUS (fused in sarcoma), TARDBP (TAR DNA binding protein), VAGFA (vascular endothelial growth factor A), VAGFB (vascular endothelial growth factor B), and VAGFC (vascular endothelial growth factor C), and any combination thereof.

Examples of proteins associated with prion diseases may include SOD1 (superoxide dismutase 1), ALS2 (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis 2), FUS (fused in sarcoma), TARDBP (TAR DNA binding protein), VAGFA (vascular endothelial growth factor A), VAGFB (vascular endothelial growth factor B), and VAGFC (vascular endothelial growth factor C), and any combination thereof.

Examples of proteins related to neurodegenerative conditions in prion disorders may include A2M (Alpha-2-Macroglobulin), AATF (Apoptosis antagonizing transcription factor), ACPP (Acid phosphatase prostate), ACTA2 (Actin alpha 2 smooth muscle aorta), ADAM22 (ADAM metallopeptidase domain), ADORA3 (Adenosine A3 receptor), or ADRA1D (Alpha-1D adrenergic receptor for Alpha-1D adrenoreceptor), for example.

Examples of proteins associated with Immunodeficiency may include A2M [alpha-2-macroglobulin]; AANAT [arylalkylamine N-acetyltransferase]; ABCA1 [ATP-binding cassette, sub-family A (ABC1), member 1]; ABCA2 [ATP-binding cassette, sub-family A (ABC1), member 2]; or ABCA3 [ATP-binding cassette, sub-family A (ABC1), member 3]; for example.

Examples of proteins associated with Trinucleotide Repeat Disorders include AR (androgen receptor), FMR1 (fragile X mental retardation 1), HTT (huntingtin), or DMPK (dystrophia myotonica-protein kinase), FXN (frataxin), ATXN2 (ataxin 2), for example.

Examples of proteins associated with Neurotransmission Disorders include SST (somatostatin), NOS1 (nitric oxide synthase 1 (neuronal)), ADRA2A (adrenergic, alpha-2A-, receptor), ADRA2C (adrenergic, alpha-2C-, receptor), TACR1 (tachykinin receptor 1), or HTR2c (5-hydroxytryptamine (serotonin) receptor 2C), for example.

Examples of neurodevelopmental-associated sequences include A2BP1 [ataxin 2-binding protein 1], AADAT [aminoadipate aminotransferase], AANAT [arylalkylamine N-acetyltransferase], ABAT [4-aminobutyrate aminotransferase], ABCA1 [ATP-binding cassette, sub-family A (ABC1), member 1], or ABCA13 [ATP-binding cassette, sub-family A (ABC1), member 13], for example.

Further examples of preferred conditions treatable with the present system include may be selected from: Aicardi-Goutieres Syndrome; Alexander Disease; Allan-Herndon-Dudley Syndrome; POLG-Related Disorders; Alpha-Mannosidosis (Type II and III); Alstrom Syndrome; Angelman; Syndrome; Ataxia-Telangiectasia; Neuronal Ceroid-Lipofuscinoses; Beta-Thalassemia; Bilateral Optic Atrophy and (Infantile) Optic Atrophy Type 1; Retinoblastoma (bilateral); Canavan Disease; Cerebrooculofacioskeletal Syndrome 1 [COFS1]; Cerebrotendinous Xanthomatosis; Cornelia de Lange Syndrome; MAPT-Related Disorders; Genetic Prion Diseases; Dravet Syndrome; Early-Onset Familial Alzheimer Disease; Friedreich Ataxia [FRDA]; Fryns Syndrome; Fucosidosis; Fukuyama Congenital Muscular Dystrophy; Galactosialidosis; Gaucher Disease; Organic Acidemias; Hemophagocytic Lymphohistiocytosis; Hutchinson-Gilford Progeria Syndrome; Mucolipidosis II; Infantile Free Sialic Acid Storage Disease; PLA2G6-Associated Neurodegeneration; Jervell and Lange-Nielsen Syndrome; Junctional Epidermolysis Bullosa; Huntington Disease; Krabbe Disease (Infantile); Mitochondrial DNA-Associated Leigh Syndrome and NARP; Lesch-Nyhan Syndrome; LIS1-Associated Lissencephaly; Lowe Syndrome; Maple Syrup Urine Disease; MECP2 Duplication Syndrome; ATP7A-Related Copper Transport Disorders; LAMA2-Related Muscular Dystrophy; Arylsulfatase A Deficiency; Mucopolysaccharidosis Types I, II or III; Peroxisome Biogenesis Disorders, Zellweger Syndrome Spectrum; Neurodegeneration with Brain Iron Accumulation Disorders; Acid Sphingomyelinase Deficiency; Niemann-Pick Disease Type C; Glycine Encephalopathy; ARX-Related Disorders; Urea Cycle Disorders; COL1A1/2-Related Osteogenesis Imperfecta; Mitochondrial DNA Deletion Syndromes; PLP1-Related Disorders; Perry Syndrome; Phelan-McDermid Syndrome; Glycogen Storage Disease Type II (Pompe Disease) (Infantile); MAPT-Related Disorders; MECP2-Related Disorders; Rhizomelic Chondrodysplasia Punctata Type 1; Roberts Syndrome; Sandhoff Disease; Schindler Disease—Type 1; Adenosine Deaminase Deficiency; Smith-Lemli-Opitz Syndrome; Spinal Muscular Atrophy; Infantile-Onset Spinocerebellar Ataxia; Hexosaminidase A Deficiency; Thanatophoric Dysplasia Type 1; Collagen Type VI-Related Disorders; Usher Syndrome Type I; Congenital Muscular Dystrophy; Wolf-Hirschhorn Syndrome; Lysosomal Acid Lipase Deficiency; and Xeroderma Pigmentosum.

As will be apparent, it is envisaged that the present system can be used to target any polynucleotide sequence of interest. Some examples of conditions or diseases that might be usefully treated using the present system are included in the Tables above and examples of genes currently associated with those conditions are also provided there. However, the genes exemplified are not exhaustive.

Aspects of the invention also encompass delivery of engineered and optimized CRISPR-Cas systems. Cas9 and one or more guide RNA can be delivered using adeno associated virus (AAV), lentivirus, adenovirus or other plasmid or viral vector types, in particular, using formulations and doses from, for example, U.S. Pat. No. 8,454,972 (formulations, doses for adenovirus), U.S. Pat. No. 8,404,658 (formulations, doses for AAV) and U.S. Pat. No. 5,846,946 (formulations, doses for DNA plasmids) and from clinical trials and publications regarding the clinical trials involving lentivirus, AAV and adenovirus. For examples, for AAV, the route of administration, formulation and dose can be as in U.S. Pat. No. 8,454,972 and as in clinical trials involving AAV. For Adenovirus, the route of administration, formulation and dose can be as in U.S. Pat. No. 8,404,658 and as in clinical trials involving adenovirus. For plasmid delivery, the route of administration, formulation and dose can be as in U.S. Pat. No. 5,846,946 and as in clinical studies involving plasmids. Doses may be based on or extrapolated to an average 70 kg individual, and can be adjusted for patients, subjects, mammals of different weight and species. Frequency of administration is within the ambit of the medical or veterinary practitioner (e.g., physician, veterinarian), depending on usual factors including the age, sex, general health, other conditions of the patient or subject and the particular condition or symptoms being addressed.

The viral vectors can be injected into the tissue of interest. For cell-type specific genome modification, the expression of Cas9 can be driven by a cell-type specific promoter. For example, liver-specific expression might use the Albumin promoter and neuron-specific expression might use the Synapsin I promoter.

Transgenic Animals and Plants

Transgenic animals are also provided. Preferred examples include animals comprising Cas9, in terms of polynucleotides encoding Cas9 or the protein itself. Mice, rats and rabbits are preferred. To generate transgenic mice with the constructs, as exemplified herein one may inject pure, linear DNA into the pronucleus of a zygote from a pseudo pregnant female, e.g. a CB56 female. Founders may then be identified, genotyped, and backcrossed to CB57 mice. The constructs may then be cloned and optionally verified, for instance by Sanger sequencing. Knock outs are envisaged where for instance one or more genes are knocked out in a model. However, are knockins are also envisaged (alone or in combination). An example knockin Cas9 mouse was generated and this is exemplified, but Cas9 knockins are preferred. To generate a Cas9 knock in mice one may target the same constitutive and conditional constructs to the Rosa26 locus, as described herein (FIGS. 25A-B and 26). Methods of US Patent Publication Nos. 20120017290 and 20110265198 assigned to Sangamo BioSciences, Inc. directed to targeting the Rosa locus may be modified to utilize the CRISPR Cas system of the present invention. In another embodiment, the methods of US Patent Publication No. 20130236946 assigned to Cellectis directed to targeting the Rosa locus may also be modified to utilize the CRISPR Cas system of the present invention.

Utility of the conditional Cas9 mouse: Applicants have shown in 293 cells that the Cas9 conditional expression construct can be activated by co-expression with Cre. Applicants also show that the correctly targeted R1 mESCs can have active Cas9 when Cre is expressed. Because Cas9 is followed by the P2A peptide cleavage sequence and then EGFP Applicants identify successful expression by observing EGFP. Applicants have shown Cas9 activation in mESCs. This same concept is what makes the conditional Cas9 mouse so useful. Applicants may cross their conditional Cas9 mouse with a mouse that ubiquitously expresses Cre (ACTB-Cre line) and may arrive at a mouse that expresses Cas9 in every cell. It should only take the delivery of chimeric RNA to induce genome editing in embryonic or adult mice. Interestingly, if the conditional Cas9 mouse is crossed with a mouse expressing Cre under a tissue specific promoter, there should only be Cas9 in the tissues that also express Cre. This approach may be used to edit the genome in only precise tissues by delivering chimeric RNA to the same tissue.

As mentioned above, transgenic animals are also provided, as are transgenic plants, especially crops and algae. The transgenic plants may be useful in applications outside of providing a disease model. These may include food or feed production through expression of, for instance, higher protein, carbohydrate, nutrient or vitamin levels than would normally be seen in the wildtype. In this regard, transgenic plants, especially pulses and tubers, and animals, especially mammals such as livestock (cows, sheep, goats and pigs), but also poultry and edible insects, are preferred.

Transgenic algae or other plants such as rape may be particularly useful in the production of vegetable oils or biofuels such as alcohols (especially methanol and ethanol), for instance. These may be engineered to express or overexpress high levels of oil or alcohols for use in the oil or biofuel industries.

Adeno Associated Virus (AAV)

In terms of in vivo delivery, AAV is advantageous over other viral vectors for a couple of reasons:

Low toxicity (this may be due to the purification method not requiring ultra centrifugation of cell particles that can activate the immune response)

Low probability of causing insertional mutagenesis because it doesn't integrate into the host genome.

AAV has a packaging limit of 4.5 or 4.75 Kb. This means that Cas9 as well as a promoter and transcription terminator have to be all fit into the same viral vector. Constructs larger than 4.5 or 4.75 Kb will lead to significantly reduced virus production. SpCas9 is quite large, the gene itself is over 4.1 Kb, which makes it difficult for packing into AAV. Therefore embodiments of the invention include utilizing homologs of Cas9 that are shorter. For example:

Species Cas9 Size Corynebacter diphtheriae 3252 Eubacterium ventriosum 3321 Streptococcus pasteurianus 3390 Lactobacillus farciminis 3378 Sphaerochaeta globus 3537 Azospirillum B510 3504 Gluconacetobacter diazotrophicus 3150 Neisseria cinerea 3246 Roseburia intestinalis 3420 Parvibaculum lavamentivorans 3111 Staphylococcus aureus 3159 Nitratifractor salsuginis DSM 16511 3396 Campylobacter lari CF89-12 3009 Streptococcus thermophilus LMD-9 3396

These species are therefore, in general, preferred Cas9 species. Applicants have shown delivery and in vivo mouse brain Cas9 expression data.

Two ways to package Cas9 coding nucleic acid molecules, e.g., DNA, into viral vectors to mediate genome modification in vivo are preferred:

To achieve NHEJ-mediated gene knockout: Single virus vector:

-   -   Vector containing two or more expression cassettes:     -   Promoter-Cas9 coding nucleic acid molecule-terminator     -   Promoter-gRNA1-terminator     -   Promoter-gRNA2-terminator     -   Promoter-gRNA(N)-terminator (up to size limit of vector)         Double virus vector:     -   Vector 1 containing one expression cassette for driving the         expression of Cas9     -   Promoter-Cas9 coding nucleic acid molecule-terminator     -   Vector 2 containing one more expression cassettes for driving         the expression of one or more guideRNAs     -   Promoter-gRNA1-terminator     -   Promoter-gRNA(N)-terminator (up to size limit of vector)

To mediate homology-directed repair: In addition to the single and double virus vector approaches described above, an additional vector is used to deliver a homology-direct repair template.

Promoter used to drive Cas9 coding nucleic acid molecule expression can include: AAV ITR can serve as a promoter: this is advantageous for eliminating the need for an additional promoter element (which can take up space in the vector). The additional space freed up can be used to drive the expression of additional elements (gRNA, etc.). Also, ITR activity is relatively weaker, so can be used to reduce toxicity due to over expression of Cas9.

For ubiquitous expression, can use promoters: CMV, CAG, CBh, PGK, SV40, Ferritin heavy or light chains, etc.

For brain expression, can use promoters: SynapsinI for all neurons, CaMKIIalpha for excitatory neurons, GAD67 or GAD65 or VGAT for GABAergic neurons, etc.

For liver expression, can use Albumin promoter.

For lung expression, can use SP-B.

For endothelial cells, can use ICAM.

For hematopoietic cells can use IFNbeta or CD45.

For Osteoblasts can use OG-2.

Promoter used to drive guide RNA can include:

Pol III promoters such as U6 or H1

Use of Pol II promoter and intronic cassettes to express gRNA.

As to AAV, the AAV can be AAV1, AAV2, AAV5 or any combination thereof. One can select the AAV of the AAV with regard to the cells to be targeted; e.g., one can select AAV serotypes 1, 2, 5 or a hybrid or capsid AAV1, AAV2, AAV5 or any combination thereof for targeting brain or neuronal cells; and one can select AAV4 for targeting cardiac tissue. AAV8 is useful for delivery to the liver. The above promoters and vectors are preferred individually.

RNA delivery is also a useful method of in vivo delivery. It is possible to deliver Cas9 and gRNA (and, for instance, HR repair template) into cells using liposomes or nanoparticles. Thus delivery of the CRISPR enzyme, such as a Cas9 and/or delivery of the RNAs of the invention may be in RNA form and via microvesicles, liposomes or nanoparticles. For example, Cas9 mRNA and gRNA can be packaged into liposomal particles for delivery in vivo. Liposomal transfection reagents such as lipofectamine from Life Technologies and other reagents on the market can effectively deliver RNA molecules into the liver.

Enhancing NHEJ or HR efficiency is also helpful for delivery. It is preferred that NHEJ efficiency is enhanced by co-expressing end-processing enzymes such as Trex2 (Dumitrache et al. Genetics. 2011 August; 188(4): 787-797). It is preferred that HR efficiency is increased by transiently inhibiting NHEJ machineries such as Ku70 and Ku86. HR efficiency can also be increased by co-expressing prokaryotic or eukaryotic homologous recombination enzymes such as RecBCD, RecA.

Various means of delivery are described herein, and further discussed in this section.

Viral delivery: The CRISPR enzyme, for instance a Cas9, and/or any of the present RNAs, for instance a guide RNA, can be delivered using adeno associated virus (AAV), lentivirus, adenovirus or other viral vector types, or combinations thereof. Cas9 and one or more guide RNAs can be packaged into one or more viral vectors. In some embodiments, the viral vector is delivered to the tissue of interest by, for example, an intramuscular injection, while other times the viral delivery is via intravenous, transdermal, intranasal, oral, mucosal, or other delivery methods. Such delivery may be either via a single dose, or multiple doses. One skilled in the art understands that the actual dosage to be delivered herein may vary greatly depending upon a variety of factors, such as the vector chose, the target cell, organism, or tissue, the general condition of the subject to be treated, the degree of transformation/modification sought, the administration route, the administration mode, the type of transformation/modification sought, etc.

Such a dosage may further contain, for example, a carrier (water, saline, ethanol, glycerol, lactose, sucrose, calcium phosphate, gelatin, dextran, agar, pectin, peanut oil, sesame oil, etc.), a diluent, a pharmaceutically-acceptable carrier (e.g., phosphate-buffered saline), a pharmaceutically-acceptable excipient, an adjuvant to enhance antigenicity, an immunostimulatory compound or molecule, and/or other compounds known in the art. The adjuvant herein may contain a suspension of minerals (alum, aluminum hydroxide, aluminum phosphate) on which antigen is adsorbed; or water-in-oil emulsion in which antigen solution is emulsified in oil (MF-59, Freund's incomplete adjuvant), sometimes with the inclusion of killed mycobacteria (Freund's complete adjuvant) to further enhance antigenicity (inhibits degradation of antigen and/or causes influx of macrophages). Adjuvants also include immunostimulatory molecules, such as cytokines, costimulatory molecules, and for example, immunostimulatory DNA or RNA molecules, such as CpG oligonucleotides. Such a dosage formulation is readily ascertainable by one skilled in the art. The dosage may further contain one or more pharmaceutically acceptable salts such as, for example, a mineral acid salt such as a hydrochloride, a hydrobromide, a phosphate, a sulfate, etc.; and the salts of organic acids such as acetates, propionates, malonates, benzoates, etc. Additionally, auxiliary substances, such as wetting or emulsifying agents, pH buffering substances, gels or gelling materials, flavorings, colorants, microspheres, polymers, suspension agents, etc. may also be present herein. In addition, one or more other conventional pharmaceutical ingredients, such as preservatives, humectants, suspending agents, surfactants, antioxidants, anticaking agents, fillers, chelating agents, coating agents, chemical stabilizers, etc. may also be present, especially if the dosage form is a reconstitutable form. Suitable exemplary ingredients include microcrystalline cellulose, carboxymethylcellulose sodium, polysorbate 80, phenylethyl alcohol, chlorobutanol, potassium sorbate, sorbic acid, sulfur dioxide, propyl gallate, the parabens, ethyl vanillin, glycerin, phenol, parachlorophenol, gelatin, albumin and a combination thereof. A thorough discussion of pharmaceutically acceptable excipients is available in REMINGTON'S PHARMACEUTICAL SCIENCES (Mack Pub. Co., N.J. 1991) which is incorporated by reference herein.

In an embodiment herein the delivery is via an adenovirus, which may be at a single booster dose containing at least 1×10⁵ particles (also referred to as particle units, pu) of adenoviral vector. In an embodiment herein, the dose preferably is at least about 1×10⁶ particles (for example, about 1×10⁶-1×10¹² particles), more preferably at least about 1×10⁷ particles, more preferably at least about 1×10⁸ particles (e.g., about 1×10⁸-1×10¹¹ particles or about 1×10⁸-1×10¹² particles), and most preferably at least about 1×10⁰ particles (e.g., about 1*×10⁹-1×10¹⁰ particles or about 1×10⁹-1×10¹² particles), or even at least about 1×10¹⁰ particles (e.g., about 1×10¹⁰-1×10¹² particles) of the adenoviral vector. Alternatively, the dose comprises no more than about 1×10¹⁴ particles, preferably no more than about 1×10¹³ particles, even more preferably no more than about 1×10¹² particles, even more preferably no more than about 1×10¹¹ particles, and most preferably no more than about 1×10¹⁰ particles (e.g., no more than about 1×10⁹ articles). Thus, the dose may contain a single dose of adenoviral vector with, for example, about 1×10⁶ particle units (pu), about 2×10⁶ pu, about 4×10⁶ pu, about 1×10⁷ pu, about 2×10⁷ pu, about 4×10⁷ pu, about 1×10⁸ pu, about 2×10⁸ pu, about 4×10⁸ pu, about 1×10⁹ pu, about 2×10⁹ pu, about 4×10⁹ pu, about 1×10¹⁰ pu, about 2×10¹⁰ pu, about 4×10¹⁰ pu, about 1×10¹¹ pu, about 2×10¹¹ pu, about 4×10¹¹ pu, about 1×10¹² pu, about 2×10¹² pu, or about 4×10¹² pu of adenoviral vector. See, for example, the adenoviral vectors in U.S. Pat. No. 8,454,972 B2 to Nabel, et. al., granted on Jun. 4, 2013; incorporated by reference herein, and the dosages at col 29, lines 36-58 thereof. In an embodiment herein, the adenovirus is delivered via multiple doses.

In an embodiment herein, the delivery is via an AAV. A therapeutically effective dosage for in vivo delivery of the AAV to a human is believed to be in the range of from about 20 to about 50 ml of saline solution containing from about 1×10¹⁰ to about 1×10¹⁰ functional AAV/ml solution. The dosage may be adjusted to balance the therapeutic benefit against any side effects. In an embodiment herein, the AAV dose is generally in the range of concentrations of from about 1×10⁵ to 1×10⁵⁰ genomes AAV, from about 1×10⁸ to 1×10²⁰ genomes AAV, from about 1×10¹⁰ to about 1×10¹⁶ genomes, or about 1×10¹¹ to about 1×10¹⁶ genomes AAV. A human dosage may be about 1×10¹³ genomes AAV. Such concentrations may be delivered in from about 0.001 ml to about 100 ml, about 0.05 to about 50 ml, or about 10 to about 25 ml of a carrier solution. Other effective dosages can be readily established by one of ordinary skill in the art through routine trials establishing dose response curves. See, for example, U.S. Pat. No. 8,404,658 B2 to Hajjar, et al., granted on Mar. 26, 2013, at col. 27, lines 45-60.

In an embodiment herein the delivery is via a plasmid. In such plasmid compositions, the dosage should be a sufficient amount of plasmid to elicit a response. For instance, suitable quantities of plasmid DNA in plasmid compositions can be from about 0.1 to about 2 mg, or from about 1 μg to about 10 μg.

The doses herein are based on an average 70 kg individual. The frequency of administration is within the ambit of the medical or veterinary practitioner (e.g., physician, veterinarian), or scientist skilled in the art.

Lentivirus

Lentiviruses are complex retroviruses that have the ability to infect and express their genes in both mitotic and post-mitotic cells. The most commonly known lentivirus is the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), which uses the envelope glycoproteins of other viruses to target a broad range of cell types.

Lentiviruses may be prepared as follows. After cloning pCasES10 (which contains a lentiviral transfer plasmid backbone), HEK293FT at low passage (p=5) were seeded in a T-75 flask to 50% confluence the day before transfection in DMEM with 10% fetal bovine serum and without antibiotics. After 20 hours, media was changed to OptiMEM (serum-free) media and transfection was done 4 hours later. Cells were transfected with 10 μg of lentiviral transfer plasmid (pCasES10) and the following packaging plasmids: 5 μg of pMD2.G (VSV-g pseudotype), and 7.5 ug of psPAX2 (gag/pol/rev/tat). Transfection was done in 4 mL OptiMEM with a cationic lipid delivery agent (50 uL Lipofectamine 2000 and 100 ul Plus reagent). After 6 hours, the media was changed to antibiotic-free DMEM with 10% fetal bovine serum.

Lentivirus may be purified as follows. Viral supernatants were harvested after 48 hours. Supernatants were first cleared of debris and filtered through a 0.45 um low protein binding (PVDF) filter. They were then spun in a ultracentrifuge for 2 hours at 24,000 rpm. Viral pellets were resuspended in 50 ul of DMEM overnight at 4 C. They were then aliquotted and immediately frozen at −80 C.

In another embodiment, minimal non-primate lentiviral vectors based on the equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV) are also contemplated, especially for ocular gene therapy (see, e.g., Balagaan, J Gene Med 2006; 8: 275-285, Published online 21 Nov. 2005 in Wiley InterScience (www.interscience.wiley.com). DOI: 10.1002/jgm.845). In another embodiment, RetinoStat®, an equine infectious anemia virus-based lentiviral gene therapy vector that expresses angiostatic proteins endostain and angiostatin that is delivered via a subretinal injection for the treatment of the web form of age-related macular degeneration is also contemplated (see, e.g., Binley et al., HUMAN GENE THERAPY 23:980-991 (September 2012)) may be modified for the CRISPR-Cas system of the present invention.

In another embodiment, self-inactivating lentiviral vectors with an siRNA targeting a common exon shared by HIV tat/rev, a nucleolar-localizing TAR decoy, and an anti-CCR5-specific hammerhead ribozyme (see, e.g., DiGiusto et al. (2010) Sci Transl Med 2:36ra43) may be used/and or adapted to the CRISPR-Cas system of the present invention. A minimum of 2.5×10⁶ CD34+ cells per kilogram patient weight may be collected and prestimulated for 16 to 20 hours in X-VIVO 15 medium (Lonza) containing 2 mML-glutamine, stem cell factor (100 ng/ml), Flt-3 ligand (Flt-3L) (100 ng/ml), and thrombopoietin (10 ng/ml) (CellGenix) at a density of 2×10⁶ cells/ml. Prestimulated cells may be transduced with lentiviral at a multiplicity of infection of 5 for 16 to 24 hours in 75-cm² tissue culture flasks coated with fibronectin (25 mg/cm²) (RetroNectin,Takara Bio Inc.).

Lentiviral vectors have been disclosed as in the treatment for Parkinson's Disease, see, e.g., US Patent Publication No. 20120295960 and U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,303,910 and 7,351,585. Lentiviral vectors have also been disclosed for the treatment of ocular diseases, see e.g., US Patent Publication Nos. 20060281180, 20090007284, US20110117189; US20090017543; US20070054961, US20100317109. Lentiviral vectors have also been disclosed for delivery to the train, see, e.g., US Patent Publication Nos. US20110293571; US20110293571, US20040013648, US20070025970, US20090111106 and U.S. Pat. No. 7,259,015.

RNA Delivery

RNA delivery: The CRISPR enzyme, for instance a Cas9, and/or any of the present RNAs, for instance a guide RNA, can also be delivered in the form of RNA. Cas9 mRNA can be generated using in vitro transcription. For example, Cas9 mRNA can be synthesized using a PCR cassette containing the following elements: T7_promoter-kozak sequence (GCCACC)-Cas9-3′ UTR from beta globin-polyA tail (a string of 120 or more adenines). The cassette can be used for transcription by T7 polymerase. Guide RNAs can also be transcribed using in vitro transcription from a cassette containing T7_promoter-GG-guide RNA sequence.

To enhance expression and reduce toxicity, the CRISPR enzyme and/or guide RNA can be modified using pseudo-U or 5-Methyl-C.

mRNA delivery methods are especially promising for liver delivery currently. In particular, for AAV8 is particularly preferred for delivery to the liver.

Nanoparticles

CRISPR enzyme mRNA and guide RNA may be delivered simultaneously using nanoparticles or lipid envelopes.

For example, Su X, Fricke J, Kavanagh D G, Irvine D J (“In vitro and in vivo mRNA delivery using lipid-enveloped pH-responsive polymer nanoparticles” Mol Pharm. 2011 Jun. 6; 8(3):774-87. doi: 10.1021/mp100390w. Epub 2011 Apr. 1) describes biodegradable core-shell structured nanoparticles with a poly(O-amino ester) (PBAE) core enveloped by a phospholipid bilayer shell. These were developed for in vivo mRNA delivery. The pH-responsive PBAE component was chosen to promote endosome disruption, while the lipid surface layer was selected to minimize toxicity of the polycation core. Such are, therefore, preferred for delivering RNA of the present invention.

In one embodiment, nanoparticles based on self assembling bioadhesive polymers are contemplated, which may be applied to oral delivery of peptides, intravenous delivery of peptides and nasal delivery of peptides, all to the brain. Other embodiments, such as oral absorption and ocular deliver of hydrophobic drugs are also contemplated. The molecular envelope technology involves an engineered polymer envelope which is protected and delivered to the site of the disease (see, e.g., Mazza, M. et al. ACSNano, 2013. 7(2): 1016-1026; Siew, A., et al. Mol Pharm, 2012. 9(1):14-28; Lalatsa, A., et al. J Contr Rel, 2012. 161(2):523-36; Lalatsa, A., et al., Mol Pharm, 2012. 9(6):1665-80; Lalatsa, A., et al. Mol Pharm, 2012. 9(6):1764-74; Garrett, N. L., et al. J Biophotonics, 2012. 5 (5-6):458-68; Garrett, N. L., et al. J Raman Spect, 2012. 43(5):681-688; Ahmad, S., et al. J Royal Soc Interface 2010. 7:S423-33; Uchegbu, I. F. Expert Opin Drug Deliv, 2006. 3(5):629-40; Qu, X., et al. Biomacromolecules, 2006. 7(12):3452-9 and Uchegbu, I. F., et al. Int J Pharm, 2001. 224:185-199). Doses of about 5 mg/kg are contemplated, with single or multiple doses, depending on the target tissue.

In one embodiment, nanoparticles that can deliver RNA to a cancer cell to stop tumor growth developed by Dan Anderson's lab at MIT may be used/and or adapted to the CRISPR Cas system of the present invention. In particular, the Anderson lab developed fully automated, combinatorial systems for the synthesis, purification, characterization, and formulation of new biomaterials and nanoformulations. See, e.g., Alabi et al., Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 2013 Aug. 6; 110(32):12881-6; Zhang et al., Adv Mater. 2013 Sep. 6; 25(33):4641-5; Jiang et al., Nano Lett. 2013 Mar. 13; 13(3):1059-64; Karagiannis et al., ACS Nano. 2012 Oct. 23; 6(10):8484-7; Whitehead et al., ACS Nano. 2012 Aug. 28; 6(8):6922-9 and Lee et al., Nat Nanotechnol. 2012 Jun. 3; 7(6):389-93.

US patent application 20110293703 relates to lipidoid compounds are also particularly useful in the administration of polynucleotides, which may be applied to deliver the CRISPR Cas system of the present invention. In one aspect, the aminoalcohol lipidoid compounds are combined with an agent to be delivered to a cell or a subject to form microparticles, nanoparticles, liposomes, or micelles. The agent to be delivered by the particles, liposomes, or micelles may be in the form of a gas, liquid, or solid, and the agent may be a polynucleotide, protein, peptide, or small molecule. The minoalcohol lipidoid compounds may be combined with other aminoalcohol lipidoid compounds, polymers (synthetic or natural), surfactants, cholesterol, carbohydrates, proteins, lipids, etc. to form the particles. These particles may then optionally be combined with a pharmaceutical excipient to form a pharmaceutical composition.

US Patent Publication No. 0110293703 also provides methods of preparing the aminoalcohol lipidoid compounds. One or more equivalents of an amine are allowed to react with one or more equivalents of an epoxide-terminated compound under suitable conditions to form an aminoalcohol lipidoid compound of the present invention. In certain embodiments, all the amino groups of the amine are fully reacted with the epoxide-terminated compound to form tertiary amines. In other embodiments, all the amino groups of the amine are not fully reacted with the epoxide-terminated compound to form tertiary amines thereby resulting in primary or secondary amines in the aminoalcohol lipidoid compound. These primary or secondary amines are left as is or may be reacted with another electrophile such as a different epoxide-terminated compound. As will be appreciated by one skilled in the art, reacting an amine with less than excess of epoxide-terminated compound will result in a plurality of different aminoalcohol lipidoid compounds with various numbers of tails. Certain amines may be fully functionalized with two epoxide-derived compound tails while other molecules will not be completely functionalized with epoxide-derived compound tails. For example, a diamine or polyamine may include one, two, three, or four epoxide-derived compound tails off the various amino moieties of the molecule resulting in primary, secondary, and tertiary amines. In certain embodiments, all the amino groups are not fully functionalized. In certain embodiments, two of the same types of epoxide-terminated compounds are used. In other embodiments, two or more different epoxide-terminated compounds are used. The synthesis of the aminoalcohol lipidoid compounds is performed with or without solvent, and the synthesis may be performed at higher temperatures ranging from 30.-100 C., preferably at approximately 50.-90 C. The prepared aminoalcohol lipidoid compounds may be optionally purified. For example, the mixture of aminoalcohol lipidoid compounds may be purified to yield an aminoalcohol lipidoid compound with a particular number of epoxide-derived compound tails. Or the mixture may be purified to yield a particular stereo- or regioisomer. The aminoalcohol lipidoid compounds may also be alkylated using an alkyl halide (e.g., methyl iodide) or other alkylating agent, and/or they may be acylated.

US Patent Publication No. 0110293703 also provides libraries of aminoalcohol lipidoid compounds prepared by the inventive methods. These aminoalcohol lipidoid compounds may be prepared and/or screened using high-throughput techniques involving liquid handlers, robots, microtiter plates, computers, etc. In certain embodiments, the aminoalcohol lipidoid compounds are screened for their ability to transfect polynucleotides or other agents (e.g., proteins, peptides, small molecules) into the cell.

US Patent Publication No. 20130302401 relates to a class of poly(beta-amino alcohols) (PBAAs) has been prepared using combinatorial polymerization. The inventive PBAAs may be used in biotechnology and biomedical applications as coatings (such as coatings of films or multilayer films for medical devices or implants), additives, materials, excipients, non-biofouling agents, micropatterning agents, and cellular encapsulation agents. When used as surface coatings, these PBAAs elicited different levels of inflammation, both in vitro and in vivo, depending on their chemical structures. The large chemical diversity of this class of materials allowed us to identify polymer coatings that inhibit macrophage activation in vitro. Furthermore, these coatings reduce the recruitment of inflammatory cells, and reduce fibrosis, following the subcutaneous implantation of carboxylated polystyrene microparticles. These polymers may be used to form polyelectrolyte complex capsules for cell encapsulation. The invention may also have many other biological applications such as antimicrobial coatings, DNA or siRNA delivery, and stem cell tissue engineering. The teachings of US Patent Publication No. 20130302401 may be applied to the CRISPR Cas system of the present invention.

In another embodiment, lipid nanoparticles (LNPs) are contemplated. In particular, an antitransthyretin small interfering RNA encapsulated in lipid nanoparticles (see, e.g., Coelho et al., N Engl J Med 2013; 369:819-29) may be applied to the CRISPR Cas system of the present invention. Doses of about 0.01 to about 1 mg per kg of body weight administered intravenously are contemplated. Medications to reduce the risk of infusion-related reactions are contemplated, such as dexamethasone, acetampinophen, diphenhydramine or cetirizine, and ranitidine are contemplated. Multiple doses of about 0.3 mg per kilogram every 4 weeks for five doses are also contemplated.

LNPs have been shown to be highly effective in delivering siRNAs to the liver (see, e.g., Tabernero et al., Cancer Discovery, April 2013, Vol. 3, No. 4, pages 363-470) and are therefore contemplated for delivering CRISPR Cas to the liver. A dosage of about four doses of 6 mg/kg of the LNP every two weeks may be contemplated. Tabernero et al. demonstrated that tumor regression was observed after the first 2 cycles of LNPs dosed at 0.7 mg/kg, and by the end of 6 cycles the patient had achieved a partial response with complete regression of the lymph node metastasis and substantial shrinkage of the liver tumors. A complete response was obtained after 40 doses in this patient, who has remained in remission and completed treatment after receiving doses over 26 months. Two patients with RCC and extrahepatic sites of disease including kidney, lung, and lymph nodes that were progressing following prior therapy with VEGF pathway inhibitors had stable disease at all sites for approximately 8 to 12 months, and a patient with PNET and liver metastases continued on the extension study for 18 months (36 doses) with stable disease.

However, the charge of the LNP must be taken into consideration. As cationic lipids combined with negatively charged lipids to induce nonbilayer structures that facilitate intracellular delivery. Because charged LNPs are rapidly cleared from circulation following intravenous injection, ionizable cationic lipids with pKa values below 7 were developed (see, e.g., Rosin et al, Molecular Therapy, vol. 19, no. 12, pages 1286-2200, December 2011). Negatively charged polymers such as siRNA oligonucleotides may be loaded into LNPs at low pH values (e.g., pH 4) where the ionizable lipids display a positive charge. However, at physiological pH values, the LNPs exhibit a low surface charge compatible with longer circulation times. Four species of ionizable cationic lipids have been focused upon, namely 1,2-dilineoyl-3-dimethylammonium-propane (DLinDAP), 1,2-dilinoleyloxy-3-N,N-dimethylaminopropane (DLinDMA), 1,2-dilinoleyloxy-keto-N,N-dimethyl-3-aminopropane (DLinKDMA), and 1,2-dilinoleyl-4-(2-dimethylaminoethyl)-[1,3]-dioxolane (DLinKC2-DMA). It has been shown that LNP siRNA systems containing these lipids exhibit remarkably different gene silencing properties in hepatocytes in vivo, with potencies varying according to the series DLinKC2-DMA>DLinKDMA>DLinDMA>>DLinDAP employing a Factor VII gene silencing model (see, e.g., Rosin et al, Molecular Therapy, vol. 19, no. 12, pages 1286-2200, December 2011). A dosage of 1 μg/ml levels may be contemplated, especially for a formulation containing DLinKC2-DMA.

Preparation of LNPs and CRISPR Cas encapsulation may be used/and or adapted from Rosin et al, Molecular Therapy, vol. 19, no. 12, pages 1286-2200, December 2011). The cationic lipids 1,2-dilineoyl-3-dimethylammonium-propane (DLinDAP), 1,2-dilinoleyloxy-3-N,N-dimethylaminopropane (DLinDMA), 1,2-dilinoleyloxyketo-N,N-dimethyl-3-aminopropane (DLinK-DMA), 1,2-dilinoleyl-4-(2-dimethylaminoethyl)-[1,3]-dioxolane (DLinKC2-DMA), (3-o-[2″-(methoxypolyethyleneglycol 2000) succinoyl]-1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycol (PEG-S-DMG), and R-3-[(ω-methoxy-poly(ethylene glycol)2000) carbamoyl]-1,2-dimyristyloxlpropyl-3-amine (PEG-C-DOMG) may be provided by Tekmira Pharmaceuticals (Vancouver, Canada) or synthesized. Cholesterol may be purchased from Sigma (St Louis, MO). The specific CRISPR Cas RNA may be encapsulated in LNPs containing DLinDAP, DLinDMA, DLinK-DMA, and DLinKC2-DMA (cationic lipid:DSPC:CHOL: PEGS-DMG or PEG-C-DOMG at 40:10:40:10 molar ratios). When required, 0.2% SP-DiOC18 (Invitrogen, Burlington, Canada) may be incorporated to assess cellular uptake, intracellular delivery, and biodistribution. Encapsulation may be performed by dissolving lipid mixtures comprised of cationic lipid:DSPC:cholesterol:PEG-c-DOMG (40:10:40:10 molar ratio) in ethanol to a final lipid concentration of 10 mmol/l. This ethanol solution of lipid may be added drop-wise to 50 mmol/l citrate, pH 4.0 to form multilamellar vesicles to produce a final concentration of 30% ethanol vol/vol. Large unilamellar vesicles may be formed following extrusion of multilamellar vesicles through two stacked 80 nm Nuclepore polycarbonate filters using the Extruder (Northern Lipids, Vancouver, Canada). Encapsulation may be achieved by adding RNA dissolved at 2 mg/ml in 50 mmol/l citrate, pH 4.0 containing 30% ethanol vol/vol drop-wise to extruded preformed large unilamellar vesicles and incubation at 31° C. for 30 minutes with constant mixing to a final RNA/lipid weight ratio of 0.06/1 wt/wt. Removal of ethanol and neutralization of formulation buffer were performed by dialysis against phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), pH 7.4 for 16 hours using Spectra/Por 2 regenerated cellulose dialysis membranes. Nanoparticle size distribution may be determined by dynamic light scattering using a NICOMP 370 particle sizer, the vesicle/intensity modes, and Gaussian fitting (Nicomp Particle Sizing, Santa Barbara, CA). The particle size for all three LNP systems may be ˜70 nm in diameter. siRNA encapsulation efficiency may be determined by removal of free siRNA using VivaPureD MiniH columns (Sartorius Stedim Biotech) from samples collected before and after dialysis. The encapsulated RNA may be extracted from the eluted nanoparticles and quantified at 260 nm. siRNA to lipid ratio was determined by measurement of cholesterol content in vesicles using the Cholesterol E enzymatic assay from Wako Chemicals USA (Richmond, VA).

Preparation of large LNPs may be used/and or adapted from Rosin et al, Molecular Therapy, vol. 19, no. 12, pages 1286-2200, December 2011. A lipid premix solution (20.4 mg/ml total lipid concentration) may be prepared in ethanol containing DLinKC2-DMA, DSPC, and cholesterol at 50:10:38.5 molar ratios. Sodium acetate may be added to the lipid premix at a molar ratio of 0.75:1 (sodium acetate:DLinKC2-DMA). The lipids may be subsequently hydrated by combining the mixture with 1.85 volumes of citrate buffer (10 mmol/1, pH 3.0) with vigorous stirring, resulting in spontaneous liposome formation in aqueous buffer containing 35% ethanol. The liposome solution may be incubated at 37° C. to allow for time-dependent increase in particle size. Aliquots may be removed at various times during incubation to investigate changes in liposome size by dynamic light scattering (Zetasizer Nano ZS, Malvern Instruments, Worcestershire, UK). Once the desired particle size is achieved, an aqueous PEG lipid solution (stock=10 mg/ml PEG-DMG in 35% (vol/vol) ethanol) may be added to the liposome mixture to yield a final PEG molar concentration of 3.5% of total lipid. Upon addition of PEG-lipids, the liposomes should their size, effectively quenching further growth. RNA may then be added to the empty liposomes at an siRNA to total lipid ratio of approximately 1:10 (wt:wt), followed by incubation for 30 minutes at 37° C. to form loaded LNPs. The mixture may be subsequently dialyzed overnight in PBS and filtered with a 0.45-μm syringe filter.

Spherical Nucleic Acid (SNA™) constructs and other nanoparticles (particularly gold nanoparticles) are also contemplate as a means to delivery CRISPR/Cas system to intended targets. Significant data show that AuraSense Therapeutics' Spherical Nucleic Acid (SNA™) constructs, based upon nucleic acid-functionalized gold nanoparticles, are superior to alternative platforms based on multiple key success factors, such as:

High in vivo stability. Due to their dense loading, a majority of cargo (DNA or siRNA) remains bound to the constructs inside cells, conferring nucleic acid stability and resistance to enzymatic degradation.

Deliverability. For all cell types studied (e.g., neurons, tumor cell lines, etc.) the constructs demonstrate a transfection efficiency of 99% with no need for carriers or transfection agents.

Therapeutic targeting. The unique target binding affinity and specificity of the constructs allow exquisite specificity for matched target sequences (i.e., limited off-target effects).

Superior efficacy. The constructs significantly outperform leading conventional transfection reagents (Lipofectamine 2000 and Cytofectin).

Low toxicity. The constructs can enter a variety of cultured cells, primary cells, and tissues with no apparent toxicity.

No significant immune response. The constructs elicit minimal changes in global gene expression as measured by whole-genome microarray studies and cytokine-specific protein assays.

Chemical tailorability. Any number of single or combinatorial agents (e.g., proteins, peptides, small molecules) can be used to tailor the surface of the constructs.

This platform for nucleic acid-based therapeutics may be applicable to numerous disease states, including inflammation and infectious disease, cancer, skin disorders and cardiovascular disease.

Citable literature includes: Cutler et al., J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2011 133:9254-9257, Hao et al., Small. 2011 7:3158-3162, Zhang et al., ACS Nano. 2011 5:6962-6970, Cutler et al., J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2012 134:1376-1391, Young et al., Nano Lett. 2012 12:3867-71, Zheng et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 2012 109:11975-80, Mirkin, Nanomedicine 2012 7:635-638 Zhang et al., J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2012 134:16488-1691, Weintraub, Nature 2013 495:S14-S16, Choi et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 2013 110(19):7625-7630, Jensen et al., Sci. Transl. Med. 5, 209ra152 (2013) and Mirkin, et al., Small, doi.org/10.1002/smll.201302143.

Self-assembling nanoparticles with siRNA may be constructed with polyethyleneimine (PEI) that is PEGylated with an Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD) peptide ligand attached at the distal end of the polyethylene glycol (PEG), for example, as a means to target tumor neovasculature expressing integrins and used to deliver siRNA inhibiting vascular endothelial growth factor receptor-2 (VEGF R2) expression and thereby tumor angiogenesis (see, e.g., Schiffelers et al., Nucleic Acids Research, 2004, Vol. 32, No. 19). Nanoplexes may be prepared by mixing equal volumes of aqueous solutions of cationic polymer and nucleic acid to give a net molar excess of ionizable nitrogen (polymer) to phosphate (nucleic acid) over the range of 2 to 6. The electrostatic interactions between cationic polymers and nucleic acid resulted in the formation of polyplexes with average particle size distribution of about 100 nm, hence referred to here as nanoplexes. A dosage of about 100 to 200 mg of CRISPR Cas is envisioned for delivery in the self-assembling nanoparticles of Schiffelers et al.

The nanoplexes of Bartlett et al. (PNAS, Sep. 25, 2007,vol. 104, no. 39) may also be applied to the present invention. The nanoplexes of Bartlett et al. are prepared by mixing equal volumes of aqueous solutions of cationic polymer and nucleic acid to give a net molar excess of ionizable nitrogen (polymer) to phosphate (nucleic acid) over the range of 2 to 6. The electrostatic interactions between cationic polymers and nucleic acid resulted in the formation of polyplexes with average particle size distribution of about 100 nm, hence referred to here as nanoplexes. The DOTA-siRNA of Bartlett et al. was synthesized as follows: 1,4,7,10-tetraazacyclododecane-1,4,7,10-tetraacetic acid mono(N-hydroxysuccinimide ester) (DOTA-NHSester) was ordered from Macrocyclics (Dallas, TX). The amine modified RNA sense strand with a 100-fold molar excess of DOTA-NHS-ester in carbonate buffer (pH 9) was added to a microcentrifuge tube. The contents were reacted by stirring for 4 h at room temperature. The DOTA-RNAsense conjugate was ethanol-precipitated, resuspended in water, and annealed to the unmodified antisense strand to yield DOTA-siRNA. All liquids were pretreated with Chelex-100 (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA) to remove trace metal contaminants. Tf-targeted and nontargeted siRNA nanoparticles may be formed by using cyclodextrin-containing polycations. Typically, nanoparticles were formed in water at a charge ratio of 3 (+/−) and an siRNA concentration of 0.5 g/liter. One percent of the adamantane-PEG molecules on the surface of the targeted nanoparticles were modified with Tf (adamantane-PEG-Tf). The nanoparticles were suspended in a 5% (wt/vol) glucose carrier solution for injection.

Davis et al. (Nature, Vol 464, 15 Apr. 2010) conducts a siRNA clinical trial that uses a targeted nanoparticle-delivery system (clinical trial registration number NCT00689065). Patients with solid cancers refractory to standard-of-care therapies are administered doses of targeted nanoparticles on days 1, 3, 8 and 10 of a 21-day cycle by a 30-min intravenous infusion. The nanoparticles consist of a synthetic delivery system containing: (1) a linear, cyclodextrin-based polymer (CDP), (2) a human transferrin protein (TF) targeting ligand displayed on the exterior of the nanoparticle to engage TF receptors (TFR) on the surface of the cancer cells, (3) a hydrophilic polymer (polyethylene glycol (PEG) used to promote nanoparticle stability in biological fluids), and (4) siRNA designed to reduce the expression of the RRM2 (sequence used in the clinic was previously denoted siR2B+5). The TFR has long been known to be upregulated in malignant cells, and RRM2 is an established anti-cancer target. These nanoparticles (clinical version denoted as CALAA-01) have been shown to be well tolerated in multi-dosing studies in non-human primates. Although a single patient with chronic myeloid leukaemia has been administered siRNAby liposomal delivery, Davis et al.'s clinical trial is the initial human trial to systemically deliver siRNA with a targeted delivery system and to treat patients with solid cancer. To ascertain whether the targeted delivery system can provide effective delivery of functional siRNA to human tumours, Davis et al. investigated biopsies from three patients from three different dosing cohorts; patients A, B and C, all of whom had metastatic melanoma and received CALAA-01 doses of 18, 24 and 30 mg m² siRNA, respectively. Similar doses may also be contemplated for the CRISPR Cas system of the present invention. The delivery of the invention may be achieved with nanoparticles containing a linear, cyclodextrin-based polymer (CDP), a human transferrin protein (TF) targeting ligand displayed on the exterior of the nanoparticle to engage TF receptors (TFR) on the surface of the cancer cells and/or a hydrophilic polymer (for example, polyethylene glycol (PEG) used to promote nanoparticle stability in biological fluids).

Exosomes

Exosomes are endogenous nano-vesicles that transport RNAs and proteins which can deliver short interfering (si)RNA to the brain in mice. To reduce immunogenicity, Alvarez-Erviti et al. (2011, Nat Biotechnol 29: 341) used self-derived dendritic cells for exosome production. Targeting was achieved by engineering the dendritic cells to express Lamp2b, an exosomal membrane protein, fused to the neuron-specific RVG peptide3. Purified exosomes were loaded with exogenous siRNA by electroporation. Intravenously injected RVG-targeted exosomes delivered GAPDH siRNA specifically to neurons, microglia, oligodendrocytes in the brain, resulting in a specific gene knockdown. Pre-exposure to RVG exosomes did not attenuate knockdown, and non-specific uptake in other tissues was not observed. The therapeutic potential of exosome-mediated siRNA delivery was demonstrated by the strong mRNA (60%) and protein (62%) knockdown of BACE1, a therapeutic target in Alzheimer's disease.

To obtain a pool of immunologically inert exosomes, Alvarez-Erviti et al. harvested bone marrow from inbred C57BL/6 mice with a homogenous major histocompatibility complex (MHC) haplotype. As immature dendritic cells produce large quantities of exosomes devoid of T-cell activators such as MHC-II and CD86, Alvarez-Erviti et al. selected for dendritic cells with granulocyte/macrophage-colony stimulating factor (GM-CSF) for 7 d. Exosomes were purified from the culture supernatant the following day using well-established ultracentrifugation protocols. The exosomes produced were physically homogenous, with a size distribution peaking at 80 nm in diameter as determined by nanoparticle tracking analysis (NTA) and electron microscopy. Alvarez-Erviti et al. obtained 6-12 μg of exosomes (measured based on protein concentration) per 10⁶ cells.

Next, Alvarez-Erviti et al. investigated the possibility of loading modified exosomes with exogenous cargoes using electroporation protocols adapted for nanoscale applications. As electroporation for membrane particles at the nanometer scale is not well-characterized, nonspecific Cy5-labeled siRNA was used for the empirical optimization of the electroporation protocol. The amount of encapsulated siRNA was assayed after ultracentrifugation and lysis of exosomes. Electroporation at 400 V and 125 μF resulted in the greatest retention of siRNA and was used for all subsequent experiments.

Alvarez-Erviti et al. administered 150 μg of each BACE1 siRNA encapsulated in 150 μg of RVG exosomes to normal C57BL/6 mice and compared the knockdown efficiency to four controls: untreated mice, mice injected with RVG exosomes only, mice injected with BACE1 siRNA complexed to an in vivo cationic liposome reagent and mice injected with BACE1 siRNA complexed to RVG-9R, the RVG pep tide conjugated to 9 D-arginines that electrostatically binds to the siRNA. Cortical tissue samples were analyzed 3 d after administration and a significant protein knockdown (45%, P<0.05, versus 62%, P<0.01) in both siRNA-RVG-9R-treated and siRNARVG exosome-treated mice was observed, resulting from a significant decrease in BACE1 mRNA levels (66% [+ or −] 15%, P<0.001 and 61% [+ or −] 13% respectively, P<0.01). Moreover, Applicants demonstrated a significant decrease (55%, P<0.05) in the total [beta]-amyloid 1-42 levels, a main component of the amyloid plaques in Alzheimer's pathology, in the RVG-exosome-treated animals. The decrease observed was greater than the 0-amyloid 1-40 decrease demonstrated in normal mice after intraventricular injection of BACE1 inhibitors. Alvarez-Erviti et al. carried out 5′-rapid amplification of cDNA ends (RACE) on BACE1 cleavage product, which provided evidence of RNAi-mediated knockdown by the siRNA.

Finally, Alvarez-Erviti et al. investigated whether siRNA-RVG exosomes induced immune responses in vivo by assessing IL-6, IP-10, TNFα and IFN-α serum concentrations. Following siRNA-RVG exosome treatment, nonsignificant changes in all cytokines were registered similar to siRNA-transfection reagent treatment in contrast to siRNA-RVG-9R, which potently stimulated IL-6 secretion, confirming the immunologically inert profile of the exosome treatment. Given that exosomes encapsulate only 20% of siRNA, delivery with RVG-exosome appears to be more efficient than RVG-9R delivery as comparable mRNA knockdown and greater protein knockdown was achieved with fivefold less siRNA without the corresponding level of immune stimulation. This experiment demonstrated the therapeutic potential of RVG-exosome technology, which is potentially suited for long-term silencing of genes related to neurodegenerative diseases. The exosome delivery system of Alvarez-Erviti et al. may be applied to deliver the CRISPR-Cas system of the present invention to therapeutic targets, especially neurodegenerative diseases. A dosage of about 100 to 1000 mg of CRISPR Cas encapsulated in about 100 to 1000 mg of RVG exosomes may be contemplated for the present invention.

El-Andaloussi et al. (Nature Protocols 7, 2112-2126(2012)) discloses how exosomes derived from cultured cells can be harnessed for delivery of siRNA in vitro and in vivo. This protocol first describes the generation of targeted exosomes through transfection of an expression vector, comprising an exosomal protein fused with a peptide ligand. Next, El-Andaloussi et al. explain how to purify and characterize exosomes from transfected cell supernatant. Next, El-Andaloussi et al. detail crucial steps for loading siRNA into exosomes. Finally, El-Andaloussi et al. outline how to use exosomes to efficiently deliver siRNA in vitro and in vivo in mouse brain. Examples of anticipated results in which exosome-mediated siRNA delivery is evaluated by functional assays and imaging are also provided. The entire protocol takes −3 weeks. Delivery or administration according to the invention may be performed using exosomes produced from self-derived dendritic cells.

In another embodiment, the plasma exosomes of Wahlgren et al. (Nucleic Acids Research, 2012, Vol. 40, No. 17 e130) are contemplated. Exosomes are nano-sized vesicles (30-90 nm in size) produced by many cell types, including dendritic cells (DC), B cells, T cells, mast cells, epithelial cells and tumor cells. These vesicles are formed by inward budding of late endosomes and are then released to the extracellular environment upon fusion with the plasma membrane. Because exosomes naturally carry RNA between cells, this property might be useful in gene therapy.

Exosomes from plasma are prepared by centrifugation of buffy coat at 900 g for 20 min to isolate the plasma followed by harvesting cell supernatants, centrifuging at 300 g for 10 min to eliminate cells and at 16 500 g for 30 min followed by filtration through a 0.22 mm filter. Exosomes are pelleted by ultracentrifugation at 120 000 g for 70 min. Chemical transfection of siRNA into exosomes is carried out according to the manufacturer's instructions in RNAi Human/Mouse Starter Kit (Quiagen, Hilden, Germany). siRNA is added to 100 ml PBS at a final concentration of 2 mmol/ml. After adding HiPerFect transfection reagent, the mixture is incubated for 10 min at RT. In order to remove the excess of micelles, the exosomes are re-isolated using aldehyde/sulfate latex beads. The chemical transfection of CRISPR Cas into exosomes may be conducted similarly to siRNA. The exosomes may be co-cultured with monocytes and lymphocytes isolated from the peripheral blood of healthy donors. Therefore, it may be contemplated that exosomes containing CRISPR Cas may be introduced to monocytes and lymphocytes of and autologously reintroduced into a human. Accordingly, delivery or administration according to the invention may be performed using plasma exosomes.

Liposomes

Delivery or administration according to the invention can be performed with liposomes. Liposomes are spherical vesicle structures composed of a uni- or multilamellar lipid bilayer surrounding internal aqueous compartments and a relatively impermeable outer lipophilic phospholipid bilayer. Liposomes have gained considerable attention as drug delivery carriers because they are biocompatible, nontoxic, can deliver both hydrophilic and lipophilic drug molecules, protect their cargo from degradation by plasma enzymes, and transport their load across biological membranes and the blood brain barrier (BBB) (see, e.g., Spuch and Navarro, Journal of Drug Delivery, vol. 2011, Article ID 469679, 12 pages, 2011. doi:10.1155/2011/469679 for review).

Liposomes can be made from several different types of lipids; however, phospholipids are most commonly used to generate liposomes as drug carriers. Although liposome formation is spontaneous when a lipid film is mixed with an aqueous solution, it can also be expedited by applying force in the form of shaking by using a homogenizer, sonicator, or an extrusion apparatus (see, e.g., Spuch and Navarro, Journal of Drug Delivery, vol. 2011, Article ID 469679, 12 pages, 2011. doi:10.1155/2011/469679 for review).

Several other additives may be added to liposomes in order to modify their structure and properties. For instance, either cholesterol or sphingomyelin may be added to the liposomal mixture in order to help stabilize the liposomal structure and to prevent the leakage of the liposomal inner cargo. Further, liposomes are prepared from hydrogenated egg phosphatidylcholine or egg phosphatidylcholine, cholesterol, and dicetyl phosphate, and their mean vesicle sizes were adjusted to about 50 and 100 nm. (see, e.g., Spuch and Navarro, Journal of Drug Delivery, vol. 2011, Article ID 469679, 12 pages, 2011. doi:10.1155/2011/469679 for review).

Conventional liposome formulation is mainly comprised of natural phospholipids and lipids such as 1,2-distearoryl-sn-glycero-3-phosphatidyl choline (DSPC), sphingomyelin, egg phosphatidylcholines and monosialoganglioside. Since this formulation is made up of phospholipids only, liposomal formulations have encountered many challenges, one of the ones being the instability in plasma. Several attempts to overcome these challenges have been made, specifically in the manipulation of the lipid membrane. One of these attempts focused on the manipulation of cholesterol. Addition of cholesterol to conventional formulations reduces rapid release of the encapsulated bioactive compound into the plasma or 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine (DOPE) increases the stability (see, e.g., Spuch and Navarro, Journal of Drug Delivery, vol. 2011, Article ID 469679, 12 pages, 2011. doi:10.1155/2011/469679 for review).

In a particularly advantageous embodiment, Trojan Horse liposomes (also known as Molecular Trojan Horses) are desirable and protocols may be found at cshprotocols.cshlp.org/content/2010/4/pdb.prot5407.long. These particles allow delivery of a transgene to the entire brain after an intravascular injection. Without being bound by limitation, it is believed that neutral lipid particles with specific antibodies conjugated to surface allow crossing of the blood brain barrier via endocytosis. Applicant postulates utilizing Trojan Horse Liposomes to deliver the CRISPR family of nucleases to the brain via an intravascular injection, which would allow whole brain transgenic animals without the need for embryonic manipulation. About 1-5 g of DNA may be contemplated for in vivo administration in liposomes.

In another embodiment, the CRISPR Cas system may be administered in liposomes, such as a stable nucleic-acid-lipid particle (SNALP) (see, e.g., Morrissey et al., Nature Biotechnology, Vol. 23, No. 8, August 2005). Daily intravenous injections of about 1, 3 or 5 mg/kg/day of a specific CRISPR Cas targeted in a SNALP are contemplated. The daily treatment may be over about three days and then weekly for about five weeks. In another embodiment, a specific CRISPR Cas encapsulated SNALP) administered by intravenous injection to at doses of abpit 1 or 2.5 mg/kg are also contemplated (see, e.g., Zimmerman et al., Nature Letters, Vol. 441, 4 May 2006). The SNALP formulation may contain the lipids 3-N-[(wmethoxypoly(ethylene glycol) 2000) carbamoyl]-!,2-dimyristyloxy-propylamine (PEG-C-DMA), 1,2-dilinoleyloxy-N,N-dimethyl-3-aminopropane (DLinDMA), 1,2-distearoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DSPC) and cholesterol, in a 2:40:10:48 molar percent ratio (see, e.g., Zimmerman et al., Nature Letters, Vol. 441, 4 May 2006).

In another embodiment, stable nucleic-acid-lipid particles (SNALPs) have proven to be effective delivery molecules to highly vascularized HepG2-derived liver tumors but not in poorly vascularized HCT-116 derived liver tumors (see, e.g., Li, Gene Therapy (2012) 19, 775-780). The SNALP liposomes may be prepared by formulating D-Lin-DMA and PEG-C-DMA with distearoylphosphatidylcholine (DSPC), Cholesterol and siRNA using a 25:1 lipid/siRNA ratio and a 48/40/10/2 molar ratio of Cholesterol/D-Lin-DMA/DSPC/PEG-C-DMA. The resulted SNALP liposomes are about 80-100 nm in size.

In yet another embodiment, a SNALP may comprise synthetic cholesterol (Sigma-Aldrich, St Louis, MO, USA), dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (Avanti Polar Lipids, Alabaster, AL, USA), 3-N-[(w-methoxy poly(ethylene glycol)2000)carbamoyl]-1,2-dimyrestyloxypropylamine, and cationic 1,2-dilinoleyloxy-3-N,Ndimethylaminopropane (see, e.g., Geisbert et al., Lancet 2010; 375: 1896-905). A dosage of about 2 mg/kg total CRISPR Cas per dose administered as, for example, a bolus intravenous infusion may be contemplated.

In yet another embodiment, a SNALP may comprise synthetic cholesterol (Sigma-Aldrich), 1,2-distearoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DSPC; Avanti Polar Lipids Inc.), PEG-cDMA, and 1,2-dilinoleyloxy-3-(N;N-dimethyl)aminopropane (DLinDMA) (see, e.g., Judge, J. Clin. Invest. 119:661-673 (2009)). Formulations used for in vivo studies may comprise a final lipid/RNA mass ratio of about 9:1.

The safety profile of RNAi nanomedicines has been reviewed by Barros and Gollob of Alnylam Pharmaceuticals (see, e.g., Advanced Drug Delivery Reviews 64 (2012) 1730-1737). The stable nucleic acid lipid particle (SNALP) is comprised of four different lipids—an ionizable lipid (DLinDMA) that is cationic at low pH, a neutral helper lipid, cholesterol, and a diffusible polyethylene glycol (PEG)-lipid. The particle is approximately 80 nm in diameter and is charge-neutral at physiologic pH. During formulation, the ionizable lipid serves to condense lipid with the anionic siRNA during particle formation. When positively charged under increasingly acidic endosomal conditions, the ionizable lipid also mediates the fusion of SNALP with the endosomal membrane enabling release of siRNA into the cytoplasm. The PEG-lipid stabilizes the particle and reduces aggregation during formulation, and subsequently provides a neutral hydrophilic exterior that improves pharmacokinetic properties.

To date, two clinical programs have been initiated using SNALPsiRNA formulations. Tekmira Pharmaceuticals recently completed a phase I single-dose study of SNALP-ApoB in adult volunteers with elevated LDL cholesterol. ApoB is predominantly expressed in the liver and jejunum and is essential for the assembly and secretion of VLDL and LDL. Seventeen subjects received a single dose of SNALP-ApoB (dose escalation across 7 dose levels). There was no evidence of liver toxicity (anticipated as the potential dose-limiting toxicity based on preclinical studies). One (of two) subjects at the highest dose experienced flu-like symptoms consistent with immune system stimulation, and the decision was made to conclude the trial.

Alnylam Pharmaceuticals has similarly advanced ALN-TTR01, which employs the SNALP technology described above and targets hepatocyte production of both mutant and wild-type TTR to treat TTR amyloidosis (ATTR). Three ATTR syndromes have been described: familial amyloidotic polyneuropathy (FAP) and familial amyloidotic cardiomyopathy (FAC) both caused by autosomal dominant mutations in TTR; and senile systemic amyloidosis (SSA) cause by wildtype TTR. A placebo-controlled, single dose-escalation phase I trial of ALN-TTR01 was recently completed in patients with ATTR. ALN-TTR01 was administered as a 15-minute IV infusion to 31 patients (23 with study drug and 8 with placebo) within a dose range of 0.01 to 1.0 mg/kg (based on siRNA). Treatment was well tolerated with no significant increases in liver function tests. Infusion-related reactions were noted in 3 of 23 patients at ≥0.4 mg/kg; all responded to slowing of the infusion rate and all continued on study. Minimal and transient elevations of serum cytokines IL-6, IP-10 and IL-Ira were noted in two patients at the highest dose of 1 mg/kg (as anticipated from preclinical and NHP studies). Lowering of serum TTR, the expected pharmacodynamics effect of ALN-TTR01, was observed at 1 mg/kg.

In yet another embodiment, a SNALP may be made by solubilizing a cationic lipid, DSPC, cholesterol and PEG-lipid were solubilized in ethanol at a molar ratio of 40:10:40:10, respectively (see, Semple et al., Nature Niotechnology, Volume 28 Number 2 Feb. 2010, pp. 172-177). The lipid mixture was added to an aqueous buffer (50 mM citrate, pH 4) with mixing to a final ethanol and lipid concentration of 30% (vol/vol) and 6.1 mg/ml, respectively, and allowed to equilibrate at 22° C. for 2 min before extrusion. The hydrated lipids were extruded through two stacked 80 nm pore-sized filters (Nuclepore) at 22° C. using a Lipex Extruder (Northern Lipids) until a vesicle diameter of 70-90 nm, as determined by dynamic light scattering analysis, was obtained. This generally required 1-3 passes. The siRNA (solubilized in a 50 mM citrate, pH 4 aqueous solution containing 30% ethanol) was added to the pre-equilibrated (35° C.) vesicles at a rate of ˜5 ml/min with mixing. After a final target siRNA/lipid ratio of 0.06 (wt/wt) was reached, the mixture was incubated for a further 30 min at 35° C. to allow vesicle reorganization and encapsulation of the siRNA. The ethanol was then removed and the external buffer replaced with PBS (155 mM NaCl, 3 mM Na2HPO4, 1 mM KH2PO4, pH 7.5) by either dialysis or tangential flow diafiltration. siRNA were encapsulated in SNALP using a controlled step-wise dilution method process. The lipid constituents of KC2-SNALP were DLin-KC2-DMA (cationic lipid), dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC; Avanti Polar Lipids), synthetic cholesterol (Sigma) and PEG-C-DMA used at a molar ratio of 57.1:7.1:34.3:1.4. Upon formation of the loaded particles, SNALP were dialyzed against PBS and filter sterilized through a 0.2 m filter before use. Mean particle sizes were 75-85 nm and 90-95% of the siRNA was encapsulated within the lipid particles. The final siRNA/lipid ratio in formulations used for in vivo testing was −0.15 (wt/wt). LNP-siRNA systems containing Factor VII siRNA were diluted to the appropriate concentrations in sterile PBS immediately before use and the formulations were administered intravenously through the lateral tail vein in a total volume of 10 ml/kg. This method may be extrapolated to the CRISPR Cas system of the present invention.

Other Lipids

Other cationic lipids, such as amino lipid 2,2-dilinoleyl-4-dimethylaminoethyl-[1,3]-dioxolane (DLin-KC2-DMA) may be utilized to encapsulate CRISPR Cas similar to SiRNA (see, e.g., Jayaraman, Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 2012, 51, 8529-8533). A preformed vesicle with the following lipid composition may be contemplated: amino lipid, distearoylphosphatidylcholine (DSPC), cholesterol and (R)-2,3-bis(octadecyloxy) propyl-1-(methoxy poly(ethylene glycol)2000)propylcarbamate (PEG-lipid) in the molar ratio 40/10/40/10, respectively, and a FVII siRNA/total lipid ratio of approximately 0.05 (w/w). To ensure a narrow particle size distribution in the range of 70-90 nm and a low polydispersity index of 0.11_0.04 (n=56), the particles may be extruded up to three times through 80 nm membranes prior to adding the CRISPR Cas RNA. Particles containing the highly potent amino lipid 16 may be used, in which the molar ratio of the four lipid components 16, DSPC, cholesterol and PEG-lipid (50/10/38.5/1.5) which may be further optimized to enhance in vivo activity.

Michael S D Kormann et al. (“Expression of therapeutic proteins after delivery of chemically modified mRNA in mice: Nature Biotechnology, Volume:29, Pages: 154-157 (2011) Published online 9 Jan. 2011) describes the use of lipid envelopes to deliver RNA. Use of lipid envelopes is also preferred in the present invention.

In another embodiment, lipids may be formulated with the CRISPR Cas system of the present invention to form lipid nanoparticles (LNPs). Lipids include, but are not limited to, DLin-KC2-DMA4, C12-200 and colipids disteroylphosphatidyl choline, cholesterol, and PEG-DMG may be formulated with CRISPR Cas instead of siRNA (see, e.g., Novobrantseva, Molecular Therapy-Nucleic Acids (2012) 1, e4; doi:10.1038/mtna.2011.3) using a spontaneous vesicle formation procedure. The component molar ratio may be about 50/10/38.5/1.5 (DLin-KC2-DMA or C12-200/disteroylphosphatidyl choline/cholesterol/PEG-DMG). The final lipid:siRNA weight ratio may be ˜12:1 and 9:1 in the case of DLin-KC2-DMA and C12-200 lipid nanoparticles (LNPs), respectively. The formulations may have mean particle diameters of ˜80 nm with >90% entrapment efficiency. A 3 mg/kg dose may be contemplated.

Tekmira has a portfolio of approximately 95 patent families, in the U.S. and abroad, that are directed to various aspects of LNPs and LNP formulations (see, e.g., U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,982,027; 7,799,565; 8,058,069; 8,283,333; 7,901,708; 7,745,651; 7,803,397; 8,101,741; 8,188,263; 7,915,399; 8,236,943 and 7,838,658 and European Pat. Nos 0.1766035; 1519714; 1781593 and 1664316), all of which may be used/and or adapted to the present invention.

The CRISPR Cas system may be delivered encapsulated in PLGA Microspheres such as that further described in US published applications 20130252281 and 20130245107 and 20130244279 (assigned to Moderna Therapeutics) which relate to aspects of formulation of compositions comprising modified nucleic acid molecules which may encode a protein, a protein precursor, or a partially or fully processed form of the protein or a protein precursor. The formulation may have a molar ratio 50:10:38.5:1.5-3.0 (cationic lipid:fusogenic lipid:cholesterol:PEG lipid). The PEG lipid may be selected from, but is not limited to PEG-c-DOMG, PEG-DMG. The fusogenic lipid may be DSPC. See also, Schrum et al., Delivery and Formulation of Engineered Nucleic Acids, US published application 20120251618.

Nanomerics' technology addresses bioavailability challenges for a broad range of therapeutics, including low molecular weight hydrophobic drugs, peptides, and nucleic acid based therapeutics (plasmid, siRNA, miRNA). Specific administration routes for which the technology has demonstrated clear advantages include the oral route, transport across the blood-brain-barrier, delivery to solid tumours, as well as to the eye. See, e.g., Mazza et al., 2013, ACS Nano. 2013 Feb. 26; 7(2):1016-26; Uchegbu and Siew, 2013, J Pharm Sci. 102(2):305-10 and Lalatsa et al., 2012, J Control Release. 2012 Jul. 20; 161(2):523-36.

US Patent Publication No. 20050019923 describes cationic dendrimers for delivering bioactive molecules, such as polynucleotide molecules, peptides and polypeptides and/or pharmaceutical agents, to a mammalian body. The dendrimers are suitable for targeting the delivery of the bioactive molecules to, for example, the liver, spleen, lung, kidney or heart. Dendrimers are synthetic 3-dimensional macromolecules that are prepared in a step-wise fashion from simple branched monomer units, the nature and functionality of which can be easily controlled and varied. Dendrimers are synthesised from the repeated addition of building blocks to a multifunctional core (divergent approach to synthesis), or towards a multifunctional core (convergent approach to synthesis) and each addition of a 3-dimensional shell of building blocks leads to the formation of a higher generation of the dendrimers. Polypropylenimine dendrimers start from a diaminobutane core to which is added twice the number of amino groups by a double Michael addition of acrylonitrile to the primary amines followed by the hydrogenation of the nitriles. This results in a doubling of the amino groups. Polypropylenimine dendrimers contain 100% protonable nitrogens and up to 64 terminal amino groups (generation 5, DAB 64). Protonable groups are usually amine groups which are able to accept protons at neutral pH. The use of dendrimers as gene delivery agents has largely focused on the use of the polyamidoamine. and phosphorous containing compounds with a mixture of amine/amide or N--P(O2)S as the conjugating units respectively with no work being reported on the use of the lower generation polypropylenimine dendrimers for gene delivery. Polypropylenimine dendrimers have also been studied as pH sensitive controlled release systems for drug delivery and for their encapsulation of guest molecules when chemically modified by peripheral amino acid groups. The cytotoxicity and interaction of polypropylenimine dendrimers with DNA as well as the transfection efficacy of DAB 64 has also been studied.

US Patent Publication No. 20050019923 is based upon the observation that, contrary to earlier reports, cationic dendrimers, such as polypropylenimine dendrimers, display suitable properties, such as specific targeting and low toxicity, for use in the targeted delivery of bioactive molecules, such as genetic material. In addition, derivatives of the cationic dendrimer also display suitable properties for the targeted delivery of bioactive molecules. See also, Bioactive Polymers, US published application 20080267903, which discloses “Various polymers, including cationic polyamine polymers and dendrimeric polymers, are shown to possess anti-proliferative activity, and may therefore be useful for treatment of disorders characterised by undesirable cellular proliferation such as neoplasms and tumours, inflammatory disorders (including autoimmune disorders), psoriasis and atherosclerosis. The polymers may be used alone as active agents, or as delivery vehicles for other therapeutic agents, such as drug molecules or nucleic acids for gene therapy. In such cases, the polymers' own intrinsic anti-tumour activity may complement the activity of the agent to be delivered.”

Supercharged Proteins

Supercharged proteins are a class of engineered or naturally occurring proteins with unusually high positive or negative net theoretical charge. Both supernegatively and superpositively charged proteins exhibit a remarkable ability to withstand thermally or chemically induced aggregation. Superpositively charged proteins are also able to penetrate mammalian cells. Associating cargo with these proteins, such as plasmid DNA, siRNA, or other proteins, can enable the functional delivery of these macromolecules into mammalian cells both in vitro and in vivo. David Liu's lab reported the creation and characterization of supercharged proteins in 2007 (Lawrence et al., 2007, Journal of the American Chemical Society 129, 10110-10112).

The nonviral delivery of siRNA and plasmid DNA into mammalian cells are valuable both for research and therapeutic applications (Akinc et al., 2010, Nat. Biotech. 26, 561-569). Purified +36 GFP protein (or other superpositively charged protein) is mixed with siRNAs in the appropriate serum-free media and allowed to complex prior addition to cells. Inclusion of serum at this stage inhibits formation of the supercharged protein-siRNA complexes and reduces the effectiveness of the treatment. The following protocol has been found to be effective for a variety of cell lines (McNaughton et al., 2009, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 106, 6111-6116). However, pilot experiments varying the dose of protein and siRNA should be performed to optimize the procedure for specific cell lines.

-   -   (1) One day before treatment, plate 1×10⁵ cells per well in a         48-well plate.     -   (2) On the day of treatment, dilute purified +36 GFP protein in         serumfree media to a final concentration 200 nM. Add siRNA to a         final concentration of 50 nM. Vortex to mix and incubate at room         temperature for 10 min.     -   (3) During incubation, aspirate media from cells and wash once         with PBS.     -   (4) Following incubation of +36 GFP and siRNA, add the         protein-siRNA complexes to cells.     -   (5) Incubate cells with complexes at 37 C for 4 h.     -   (6) Following incubation, aspirate the media and wash three         times with 20 U/mL heparin PBS. Incubate cells with         serum-containing media for a further 48 h or longer depending         upon the assay for knockdown.     -   (7) Analyze cells by immunoblot, qPCR, phenotypic assay, or         other appropriate method.

David Liu's lab has further found +36 GFP to be an effective plasmid delivery reagent in a range of cells. As plasmid DNA is a larger cargo than siRNA, proportionately more +36 GFP protein is required to effectively complex plasmids. For effective plasmid delivery Applicants have developed a variant of +36 GFP bearing a C-terminal HA2 peptide tag, a known endosome-disrupting peptide derived from the influenza virus hemagglutinin protein. The following protocol has been effective in a variety of cells, but as above it is advised that plasmid DNA and supercharged protein doses be optimized for specific cell lines and delivery applications.

-   -   (1) One day before treatment, plate 1×10⁵ per well in a 48-well         plate.     -   (2) On the day of treatment, dilute purified b36 GFP protein in         serumfree media to a final concentration 2 mM. Add 1 mg of         plasmid DNA. Vortex to mix and incubate at room temperature for         10 min.     -   (3) During incubation, aspirate media from cells and wash once         with PBS.     -   (4) Following incubation of 36 GFP and plasmid DNA, gently add         the protein-DNA complexes to cells.     -   (5) Incubate cells with complexes at 37 C for 4 h.     -   (6) Following incubation, aspirate the media and wash with PBS.         Incubate cells in serum-containing media and incubate for a         further 24-48 h.     -   (7) Analyze plasmid delivery (e.g., by plasmid-driven gene         expression) as appropriate.

See also, e.g., McNaughton et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 106, 6111-6116 (2009); Cronican et al., ACS Chemical Biology 5, 747-752 (2010); Cronican et al., Chemistry & Biology 18, 833-838 (2011); Thompson et al., Methods in Enzymology 503, 293-319 (2012); Thompson, D. B., et al., Chemistry & Biology 19 (7), 831-843 (2012). The methods of the super charged proteins may be used and/or adapted for delivery of the CRISPR Cas system of the present invention.

Cell Penetrating Peptides

In yet another embodiment, cell penetrating peptides (CPPs) are contemplated for the delivery of the CRISPR Cas system. CPPs are short peptides that facilitate cellular uptake of various molecular cargo (from nanosize particles to small chemical molecules and large fragments of DNA). The term “cargo” as used herein includes but is not limited to the group consisting of therapeutic agents, diagnostic probes, peptides, nucleic acids, antisense oligonucleotides, plasmids, proteins, nanoparticles, liposomes, chromophores, small molecules and radioactive materials. In aspects of the invention, the cargo may also comprise any component of the CRISPR Cas system or the entire functional CRISPR Cas system. Aspects of the present invention further provide methods for delivering a desired cargo into a subject comprising: (a) preparing a complex comprising the cell penetrating peptide of the present invention and a desired cargo, and (b) orally, intraarticularly, intraperitoneally, intrathecally, intrarterially, intranasally, intraparenchymally, subcutaneously, intramuscularly, intravenously, dermally, intrarectally, or topically administering the complex to a subject. The cargo is associated with the peptides either through chemical linkage via covalent bonds or through non-covalent interactions.

The function of the CPPs are to deliver the cargo into cells, a process that commonly occurs through endocytosis with the cargo delivered to the endosomes of living mammalian cells. Cell-penetrating peptides are of different sizes, amino acid sequences, and charges but all CPPs have one distinct characteristic, which is the ability to translocate the plasma membrane and facilitate the delivery of various molecular cargoes to the cytoplasm or an organelle. CPP translocation may be classified into three main entry mechanisms: direct penetration in the membrane, endocytosis-mediated entry, and translocation through the formation of a transitory structure. CPPs have found numerous applications in medicine as drug delivery agents in the treatment of different diseases including cancer and virus inhibitors, as well as contrast agents for cell labeling. Examples of the latter include acting as a carrier for GFP, MRI contrast agents, or quantum dots. CPPs hold great potential as in vitro and in vivo delivery vectors for use in research and medicine. CPPs typically have an amino acid composition that either contains a high relative abundance of positively charged amino acids such as lysine or arginine or has sequences that contain an alternating pattern of polar/charged amino acids and non-polar, hydrophobic amino acids. These two types of structures are referred to as polycationic or amphipathic, respectively. A third class of CPPs are the hydrophobic peptides, containing only apolar residues, with low net charge or have hydrophobic amino acid groups that are crucial for cellular uptake. One of the initial CPPs discovered was the trans-activating transcriptional activator (Tat) from Human Immunodeficiency Virus 1 (HIV-1) which was found to be efficiently taken up from the surrounding media by numerous cell types in culture. Since then, the number of known CPPs has expanded considerably and small molecule synthetic analogues with more effective protein transduction properties have been generated. CPPs include but are not limited to Penetratin, Tat (48-60), Transportan, and (R-AhX-R₄) (Ahx=aminohexanoyl).

As described in U.S. Pat. No. 8,372,951, there is provided a CPP derived from eosinophil cationic protein (ECP) which exhibits highly cell-penetrating efficiency and low toxicity. Aspects of delivering the CPP with its cargo into a vertebrate subject are also provided. Further aspects of CPPs and their delivery are described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 8,575,305; 8,614,194 and 8,044,019.

That CPPs can be employed to deliver the CRISPR-Cas system is also provided in the manuscript “Gene disruption by cell-penetrating peptide-mediated delivery of Cas9 protein and guide RNA”, by Suresh Ramakrishna, Abu-Bonsrah Kwaku Dad, Jagadish Beloor, et al. Genome Res. 2014 Apr. 2. [Epub ahead of print], incorporated by reference in its entirety, wherein it is demonstrated that treatment with CPP-conjugated recombinant Cas9 protein and CPP-complexed guide RNAs lead to endogenous gene disruptions in human cell lines. In the paper the Cas9 protein was conjugated to CPP via a thioether bond, whereas the guide RNA was complexed with CPP, forming condensed, positively charged nanoparticles. It was shown that simultaneous and sequential treatment of human cells, including embryonic stem cells, dermal fibroblasts, HEK293T cells, HeLa cells, and embryonic carcinoma cells, with the modified Cas9 and guide RNA led to efficient gene disruptions with reduced off-target mutations relative to plasmid transfections.

Implantable Devices

In another embodiment, implantable devices are also contemplated for delivery of the CRISPR Cas system. For example, US Patent Publication 20110195123 discloses an implantable medical device which elutes a drug locally and in prolonged period is provided, including several types of such a device, the treatment modes of implementation and methods of implantation. The device comprising of polymeric substrate, such as a matrix for example, that is used as the device body, and drugs, and in some cases additional scaffolding materials, such as metals or additional polymers, and materials to enhance visibility and imaging. The selection of drug is based on the advantageous of releasing drug locally and in prolonged period, where drug is released directly to the extracellular matrix (ECM) of the diseased area such as tumor, inflammation, degeneration or for symptomatic objectives, or to injured smooth muscle cells, or for prevention. One kind of drug is the gene silencing drugs based on RNA interference (RNAi), including but not limited to si RNA, sh RNA, or antisense RNA/DNA, ribozyme and nucleoside analogs. Therefore, this system may be used/and or adapted to the CRISPR Cas system of the present invention. The modes of implantation in some embodiments are existing implantation procedures that are developed and used today for other treatments, including brachytherapy and needle biopsy. In such cases the dimensions of the new implant described in this invention are similar to the original implant. Typically a few devices are implanted during the same treatment procedure.

As described in US Patent Publication 20110195123, there is provided a drug delivery implantable or insertable system, including systems applicable to a cavity such as the abdominal cavity and/or any other type of administration in which the drug delivery system is not anchored or attached, comprising a biostable and/or degradable and/or bioabsorbable polymeric substrate, which may for example optionally be a matrix. It should be noted that the term “insertion” also includes implantation. The drug delivery system is preferably implemented as a “Loder” as described in US Patent Publication 20110195123.

The polymer or plurality of polymers are biocompatible, incorporating an agent and/or plurality of agents, enabling the release of agent at a controlled rate, wherein the total volume of the polymeric substrate, such as a matrix for example, in some embodiments is optionally and preferably no greater than a maximum volume that permits a therapeutic level of the agent to be reached. As a non-limiting example, such a volume is preferably within the range of 0.1 m³ to 1000 mm³, as required by the volume for the agent load. The Loder may optionally be larger, for example when incorporated with a device whose size is determined by functionality, for example and without limitation, a knee joint, an intra-uterine or cervical ring and the like.

The drug delivery system (for delivering the composition) is designed in some embodiments to preferably employ degradable polymers, wherein the main release mechanism is bulk erosion; or in some embodiments, non degradable, or slowly degraded polymers are used, wherein the main release mechanism is diffusion rather than bulk erosion, so that the outer part functions as membrane, and its internal part functions as a drug reservoir, which practically is not affected by the surroundings for an extended period (for example from about a week to about a few months). Combinations of different polymers with different release mechanisms may also optionally be used. The concentration gradient at the surface is preferably maintained effectively constant during a significant period of the total drug releasing period, and therefore the diffusion rate is effectively constant (termed “zero mode” diffusion). By the term “constant” it is meant a diffusion rate that is preferably maintained above the lower threshold of therapeutic effectiveness, but which may still optionally feature an initial burst and/or fluctuate, for example increasing and decreasing to a certain degree. The diffusion rate is preferably so maintained for a prolonged period, and it can be considered constant to a certain level to optimize the therapeutically effective period, for example the effective silencing period.

The drug delivery system optionally and preferably is designed to shield the nucleotide based therapeutic agent from degradation, whether chemical in nature or due to attack from enzymes and other factors in the body of the subject.

The drug delivery system as described in US Patent Publication 20110195123 is optionally associated with sensing and/or activation appliances that are operated at and/or after implantation of the device, by non and/or minimally invasive methods of activation and/or acceleration/deceleration, for example optionally including but not limited to thermal heating and cooling, laser beams, and ultrasonic, including focused ultrasound and/or RF (radiofrequency) methods or devices.

According to some embodiments of US Patent Publication 20110195123, the site for local delivery may optionally include target sites characterized by high abnormal proliferation of cells, and suppressed apoptosis, including tumors, active and or chronic inflammation and infection including autoimmune diseases states, degenerating tissue including muscle and nervous tissue, chronic pain, degenerative sites, and location of bone fractures and other wound locations for enhancement of regeneration of tissue, and injured cardiac, smooth and striated muscle. The site for local delivery also may optionally include sites enabling performing preventive activities including pregnancy, prevention of infection and aging.

The site for implantation of the composition, or target site, preferably features a radius, area and/or volume that is sufficiently small for targeted local delivery. For example, the target site optionally has a diameter in a range of from about 0.1 mm to about 5 cm.

The location of the target site is preferably selected for maximum therapeutic efficacy. For example, the composition of the drug delivery system (optionally with a device for implantation as described above) is optionally and preferably implanted within or in the proximity of a tumor environment, or the blood supply associated thereof.

For example the composition (optionally with the device) is optionally implanted within or in the proximity to pancreas, prostate, breast, liver, via the nipple, within the vascular system and so forth.

The target location is optionally selected from the group consisting of (as non-limiting examples only, as optionally any site within the body may be suitable for implanting a Loder): 1. brain at degenerative sites like in Parkinson or Alzheimer disease at the basal ganglia, white and gray matter; 2. spine as in the case of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS); 3. uterine cervix to prevent HPV infection; 4. active and chronic inflammatory joints; 5. dermis as in the case of psoriasis; 6. sympathetic and sensoric nervous sites for analgesic effect; 7. Intra osseous implantation; 8. acute and chronic infection sites; 9. Intra vaginal; 10. Inner ear--auditory system, labyrinth of the inner ear, vestibular system; 11. Intra tracheal; 12. Intra-cardiac; coronary, epicardiac; 13. urinary bladder; 14. biliary system; 15. parenchymal tissue including and not limited to the kidney, liver, spleen; 16. lymph nodes; 17. salivary glands; 18. dental gums; 19. Intra-articular (into joints); 20. Intra-ocular; 21. Brain tissue; 22. Brain ventricles; 23. Cavities, including abdominal cavity (for example but without limitation, for ovary cancer); 24. Intra esophageal and 25. Intra rectal.

Optionally insertion of the system (for example a device containing the composition) is associated with injection of material to the ECM at the target site and the vicinity of that site to affect local pH and/or temperature and/or other biological factors affecting the diffusion of the drug and/or drug kinetics in the ECM, of the target site and the vicinity of such a site.

Optionally, according to some embodiments, the release of said agent could be associated with sensing and/or activation appliances that are operated prior and/or at and/or after insertion, by non and/or minimally invasive and/or else methods of activation and/or acceleration/deceleration, including laser beam, radiation, thermal heating and cooling, and ultrasonic, including focused ultrasound and/or RF (radiofrequency) methods or devices, and chemical activators.

According to other embodiments of US Patent Publication 20110195123, the drug preferably comprises a gene silencing biological RNAi drug, for example for localized cancer cases in breast, pancreas, brain, kidney, bladder, lung, and prostate as described below. Moreover, many drugs other than siRNA are applicable to be encapsulated in Loder, and can be used in association with this invention, as long as such drugs can be encapsulated with the Loder substrate, such as a matrix for example. Such drugs include approved drugs that are delivered today by methods other than of this invention, including Amphotericin B for fungal infection; antibiotics such as in osteomyelitis; pain killers such as narcotics; anti degenerative such as in Alzheimer or Parkinson diseases in a Loder implanted in the vicinity of the spine in the case of back pain. Such a system may be used and/or adapted to deliver the CRISPR Cas system of the present invention.

For example, for specific applications such as prevention of growth or regrowth of smooth muscle cells (that are injured during a stenting procedure and as a result tend to proliferate), the drug may optionally be siRNA that silence smooth muscle cells, including H19 silencing, or a drug selected from the group consisting of taxol, rapamycin and rapamycin-analogs. In such cases the Loder is preferably either a Drug Eluting Stent (DES), with prolonged release at constant rate, or a dedicated device that is implanted separately, in association to the stent. All of this may be used/and or adapted to the CRISPR Cas system of the present invention.

As another example of a specific application, neuro and muscular degenerative diseases develop due to abnormal gene expression. Local delivery of silencing RNAs may have therapeutic properties for interfering with such abnormal gene expression. Local delivery of anti apoptotic, anti inflammatory and anti degenerative drugs including small drugs and macromolecules may also optionally be therapeutic. In such cases the Loder is applied for prolonged release at constant rate and/or through a dedicated device that is implanted separately. All of this may be used and/or adapted to the CRISPR Cas system of the present invention.

As yet another example of a specific application, psychiatric and cognitive disorders are treated with gene modifiers. Gene knockdown with silencing RNA is a treatment option. Loders locally delivering nucleotide based agents to central nervous system sites are therapeutic options for psychiatric and cognitive disorders including but not limited to psychosis, bi-polar diseases, neurotic disorders and behavioral maladies. The Loders could also deliver locally drugs including small drugs and macromolecules upon implantation at specific brain sites. All of this may be used and/or adapted to the CRISPR Cas system of the present invention.

As another example of a specific application, silencing of innate and/or adaptive immune mediators at local sites enables the prevention of organ transplant rejection. Local delivery of silencing RNAs and immunomodulating reagents with the Loder implanted into the transplanted organ and/or the implanted site renders local immune suppression by repelling immune cells such as CD8 activated against the transplanted organ. All of this may be used/and or adapted to the CRISPR Cas system of the present invention.

As another example of a specific application, vascular growth factors including VEGFs and angiogenin and others are essential for neovascularization. Local delivery of the factors, peptides, peptidomimetics, or suppressing their repressors is an important therapeutic modality; silencing the repressors and local delivery of the factors, peptides, macromolecules and small drugs stimulating angiogenesis with the Loder is therapeutic for peripheral, systemic and cardiac vascular disease.

The method of insertion, such as implantation, may optionally already be used for other types of tissue implantation and/or for insertions and/or for sampling tissues, optionally without modifications, or alternatively optionally only with non-major modifications in such methods. Such methods optionally include but are not limited to brachytherapy methods, biopsy, endoscopy with and/or without ultrasound, such as ERCP, stereotactic methods into the brain tissue, Laparoscopy, including implantation with a laparoscope into joints, abdominal organs, the bladder wall and body cavities.

CRISPR Enzyme mRNA and Guide RNA

CRISPR enzyme mRNA and guide RNA might also be delivered separately. CRISPR enzyme mRNA can be delivered prior to the guide RNA to give time for CRISPR enzyme to be expressed. CRISPR enzyme mRNA might be administered 1-12 hours (preferably around 2-6 hours) prior to the administration of guide RNA.

Alternatively, CRISPR enzyme mRNA and guide RNA can be administered together. Advantageously, a second booster dose of guide RNA can be administered 1-12 hours (preferably around 2-6 hours) after the initial administration of CRISPR enzyme mRNA+guide RNA.

Additional administrations of CRISPR enzyme mRNA and/or guide RNA might be useful to achieve the most efficient levels of genome modification.

For minimization of toxicity and off-target effect, it will be important to control the concentration of CRISPR enzyme mRNA and guide RNA delivered. Optimal concentrations of CRISPR enzyme mRNA and guide RNA can be determined by testing different concentrations in a cellular or animal model and using deep sequencing the analyze the extent of modification at potential off-target genomic loci. For example, for the guide sequence targeting 5′-GAGTCCGAGCAGAAGAAGAA-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 36) in the EMX1 gene of the human genome, deep sequencing can be used to assess the level of modification at the following two off-target loci, 1: 5′-GAGTCCTAGCAGGAGAAGAA-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 37) and 2: 5′-GAGTCTAAGCAGAAGAAGAA-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 38). The concentration that gives the highest level of on-target modification while minimizing the level of off-target modification should be chosen for in vivo delivery.

Crystallization of CRISPR-Cas9 and Characterization of Crystal Structure

The crystals of the invention can be obtained by techniques of protein crystallography, including batch, liquid bridge, dialysis, vapor diffusion and hanging drop methods. Generally, the crystals of the invention are grown by dissolving substantially pure CRISPR-Cas9 and a nucleic acid molecule to which it binds in an aqueous buffer containing a precipitant at a concentration just below that necessary to precipitate. Water is removed by controlled evaporation to produce precipitating conditions, which are maintained until crystal growth ceases.

Uses of the Crystals, Crystal Structure and Atomic Structure Co-Ordinates: The crystals of the invention, and particularly the atomic structure co-ordinates obtained therefrom, have a wide variety of uses. The crystals and structure co-ordinates are particularly useful for identifying compounds (nucleic acid molecules) that bind to CRISPR-Cas9, and CRISPR-Cas9s that can bind to particular compounds (nucleic acid molecules). Thus, the structure co-ordinates described herein can be used as phasing models in determining the crystal structures of additional synthetic or mutated CRISPR-Cas9s, Cas9s, nickases, binding domains. The provision of the crystal structure of CRISPR-Cas9 complexed with a nucleic acid molecule as in the herein Crystal Structure Table and the Figures provide the skilled artisan with a detailed insight into the mechanisms of action of CRISPR-Cas9. This insight provides a means to design modified CRISPR-Cas9s, such as by attaching thereto a functional group, such as a repressor or activator. While one can attach a functional group such as a repressor or activator to the N or C terminal of CRISPR-Cas9, the crystal structure demonstrates that the N terminal seems obscured or hidden, whereas the C terminal is more available for a functional group such as repressor or activator. Moreover, the crystal structure demonstrates that there is a flexible loop between approximately CRISPR-Cas9 (S. pyogenes) residues 534-676 which is suitable for attachment of a functional group such as an activator or repressor. Attachment can be via a linker, e.g., a flexible glycine-serine (GlyGlyGlySer) (SEQ ID NO: 1) or (GGGS)3 (SEQ ID NO: 13) or a rigid alpha-helical linker such as (Ala(GluAlaAlaAlaLys)Ala) (SEQ ID NO: 2). In addition to the flexible loop there is also a nuclease or H3 region, an H2 region and a helical region. By “helix” or “helical”, is meant a helix as known in the art, including, but not limited to an alpha-helix. Additionally, the term helix or helical may also be used to indicate a c-terminal helical element with an N-terminal turn.

The provision of the crystal structure of CRISPR-Cas9 complexed with a nucleic acid molecule allows a novel approach for drug or compound discovery, identification, and design for compounds that can bind to CRISPR-Cas9 and thus the invention provides tools useful in diagnosis, treatment, or prevention of conditions or diseases of multicellular organisms, e.g., algae, plants, invertebrates, fish, amphibians, reptiles, avians, mammals; for example domesticated plants, animals (e.g., production animals such as swine, bovine, chicken; companion animal such as felines, canines, rodents (rabbit, gerbil, hamster); laboratory animals such as mouse, rat), and humans. Accordingly, the invention provides a computer-based method of rational design of CRISPR-Cas9 complexes. This rational design can comprise: providing the structure of the CRISPR-Cas9 complex as defined by some or all (e.g., at least 2 or more, e.g., at least 5, advantageously at least 10, more advantageously at least 50 and even more advantageously at least 100 atoms of the structure) co-ordinates in the herein Crystal Structure Table and/or in Figure(s); providing a structure of a desired nucleic acid molecule as to which a CRISPR-Cas9 complex is desired; and fitting the structure of the CRISPR-Cas9 complex as defined by some or all co-ordinates in the herein Crystal Structure Table and/or in Figures to the desired nucleic acid molecule, including in said fitting obtaining putative modification(s) of the CRISPR-Cas9 complex as defined by some or all co-ordinates in the herein Crystal Structure Table and/or in Figures for said desired nucleic acid molecule to bind for CRISPR-Cas9 complex(es) involving the desired nucleic acid molecule. The method or fitting of the method may use the co-ordinates of atoms of interest of the CRISPR-Cas9 complex as defined by some or all co-ordinates in the herein Crystal Structure Table and/or in Figures which are in the vicinity of the active site or binding region (e.g., at least 2 or more, e.g., at least 5, advantageously at least 10, more advantageously at least 50 and even more advantageously at least 100 atoms of the structure) in order to model the vicinity of the active site or binding region. These co-ordinates may be used to define a space which is then screened “in silico” against a desired or candidate nucleic acid molecule. Thus, the invention provides a computer-based method of rational design of CRISPR-Cas9 complexes. This method may include: providing the co-ordinates of at least two atoms of the herein Crystal Structure Table (“selected co-ordinates”); providing the structure of a candidate or desired nucleic acid molecule; and fitting the structure of the candidate to the selected co-ordinates. In this fashion, the skilled person may also fit a functional group and a candidate or desired nucleic acid molecule. For example, providing the structure of the CRISPR-Cas9 complex as defined by some or all (e.g., at least 2 or more, e.g., at least 5, advantageously at least 10, more advantageously at least 50 and even more advantageously at least 100 atoms of the structure) co-ordinates in the herein Crystal Structure Table and/or in Figure(s); providing a structure of a desired nucleic acid molecule as to which a CRISPR-Cas9 complex is desired; fitting the structure of the CRISPR-Cas9 complex as defined by some or all co-ordinates in the herein Crystal Structure Table and/or in Figures to the desired nucleic acid molecule, including in said fitting obtaining putative modification(s) of the CRISPR-Cas9 complex as defined by some or all co-ordinates in the herein Crystal Structure Table and/or in Figures for said desired nucleic acid molecule to bind for CRISPR-Cas9 complex(es) involving the desired nucleic acid molecule; selecting putative fit CRISPR-Cas9 desired nucleic acid molecule complex(es), fitting such putative fit CRISPR-Cas9-desired nucleic acid molecule complex(es) to the functional group (e.g., activator, repressor), e.g., as to locations for situating the functional group (e.g., positions within the flexible loop) and/or putative modifications of the putative fit CRISPR-Cas9-desired nucleic acid molecule complex(es) for creating locations for situating the functional group. As alluded to, the invention can be practiced using co-ordinates in the herein Crystal Structure Table and/or in Figures which are in the vicinity of the active site or binding region; and therefore, the methods of the invention can employ a sub-domain of interest of the CRISPR-Cas9 complex. Methods of the invention can be practiced using coordinates of a domain or sub-domain. The methods can optionally include synthesizing the candidate or desired nucleic acid molecule and/or the CRISPR-Cas9 systems from the “in silico” output and testing binding and/or activity of “wet” or actual a functional group linked to a “wet” or actual CRISPR-Cas9 system bound to a “wet” or actual candidate or desired nucleic acid molecule. The methods can include synthesizing the CRISPR-Cas9 systems (including a functional group) from the “in silico” output and testing binding and/or activity of “wet” or actual a functional group linked to a “wet” or actual CRISPR-Cas9 system bound to an in vivo “wet” or actual candidate or desired nucleic acid molecule, e.g., contacting “wet” or actual CRISPR-Cas9 system including a functional group from the “in silico” output with a cell containing the desired or candidate nucleic acid molecule. These methods can include observing the cell or an organism containing the cell for a desired reaction, e.g., reduction of symptoms or condition or disease. The step of providing the structure of a candidate nucleic acid molecule may involve selecting the compound by computationally screening a database containing nucleic acid molecule data, e.g., such data as to conditions or diseases. A 3-D descriptor for binding of the candidate nucleic acid molecule may be derived from geometric and functional constraints derived from the architecture and chemical nature of the CRISPR-Cas9 complex or domains or regions thereof from the herein crystal structure. In effect, the descriptor can be a type of virtual modification(s) of the CRISPR-Cas9 complex crystal structure herein for binding CRISPR-Cas9 to the candidate or desired nucleic acid molecule. The descriptor may then be used to interrogate the nucleic acid molecule database to ascertain those nucleic acid molecules of the database that have putatively good binding to the descriptor. The herein “wet” steps can then be performed using the descriptor and nucleic acid molecules that have putatively good binding.

“Fitting” can mean determining, by automatic or semi-automatic means, interactions between at least one atom of the candidate and at least one atom of the CRISPR-Cas9 complex and calculating the extent to which such an interaction is stable. Interactions can include attraction, repulsion, brought about by charge, steric considerations, and the like. A “sub-domain” can mean at least one, e.g., one, two, three, or four, complete element(s) of secondary structure. Particular regions or domains of the CRISPR-Cas9 include those identified in the herein Crystal Structure Table and the Figures.

In any event, the determination of the three-dimensional structure of CRISPR-cas 9 (S. pyogenes Cas9) complex provides a basis for the design of new and specific nucleic acid molecules that bind to CRISPR-cas 9 (e.g., S. pyogenes Cas9), as well as the design of new CRISPR-Cas9 systems, such as by way of modification of the CRISPR-Cas9 system to bind to various nucleic acid molecules, by way of modification of the CRISPR-Cas9 system to have linked thereto to any one or more of various functional groups that may interact with each other, with the CRISPR-Cas9 (e.g., an inducible system that provides for self-activation and/or self-termination of function), with the nucleic acid molecule nucleic acid molecules (e.g., the functional group may be a regulatory or functional domain which may be selected from the group consisting of a transcriptional repressor, a transcriptional activator, a nuclease domain, a DNA methyl transferase, a protein acetyltransferase, a protein deacetylase, a protein methyltransferase, a protein deaminase, a protein kinase, and a protein phosphatase; and, in some aspects, the functional domain is an epigenetic regulator; see, e.g., Zhang et al., U.S. Pat. No. 8,507,272, and it is again mentioned that it and all documents cited herein and all appln cited documents are hereby incorporated herein by reference), by way of modification of Cas9, by way of novel nickases). Indeed, the herewith CRISPR-Cas9 (S. pyogenes Cas9) crystal structure has a multitude of uses. For example, from knowing the three-dimensional structure of CRISPR-Cas9 (S. pyogenes Cas9) crystal structure, computer modelling programs may be used to design or identify different molecules expected to interact with possible or confirmed sites such as binding sites or other structural or functional features of the CRISPR-Cas9 system (e.g., S. pyogenes Cas9). Compound that potentially bind (“binder”) can be examined through the use of computer modeling using a docking program. Docking programs are known; for example GRAM, DOCK or AUTODOCK (see Walters et al. Drug Discovery Today, vol. 3, no. 4 (1998), 160-178, and Dunbrack et al. Folding and Design 2 (1997), 27-42). This procedure can include computer fitting of potential binders ascertain how well the shape and the chemical structure of the potential binder will bind to a CRISPR-Cas9 system (e.g., S. pyogenes Cas9). Computer-assisted, manual examination of the active site or binding site of a CRISPR-Cas9 system (e.g., S. pyogenes Cas9) may be performed. Programs such as GRID (P. Goodford, J. Med. Chem, 1985, 28, 849-57)—a program that determines probable interaction sites between molecules with various functional groups—may also be used to analyze the active site or binding site to predict partial structures of binding compounds. Computer programs can be employed to estimate the attraction, repulsion or steric hindrance of the two binding partners, e.g., CRISPR-Cas9 system (e.g., S. pyogenes Cas9) and a candidate nucleic acid molecule or a nucleic acid molecule and a candidate CRISPR-Cas9 system (e.g., S. pyogenes Cas9); and the CRISPR-Cas9 crystral structure (S. pyogenes Cas9) herewith enables such methods. Generally, the tighter the fit, the fewer the steric hindrances, and the greater the attractive forces, the more potent the potential binder, since these properties are consistent with a tighter binding constant. Furthermore, the more specificity in the design of a candidate CRISPR-Cas9 system (e.g., S. pyogenes Cas9), the more likely it is that it will not interact with off-target molecules as well. Also, “wet” methods are enabled by the instant invention. For example, in an aspect, the invention provides for a method for determining the structure of a binder (e.g., target nucleic acid molecule) of a candidate CRISPR-Cas9 system (e.g., S. pyogenes Cas9) bound to the candidate CRISPR-Cas9 system (e.g., S. pyogenes Cas9), said method comprising, (a) providing a first crystal of a candidate CRISPR-Cas9 system (S. pyogenes Cas9) according to the invention or a second crystal of a candidate a candidate CRISPR-Cas9 system (e.g., S. pyogenes Cas9), (b) contacting the first crystal or second crystal with said binder under conditions whereby a complex may form; and (c) determining the structure of said a candidate (e.g., CRISPR-Cas9 system (e.g., S. pyogenes Cas9) or CRISPR-Cas9 system (S. pyogenes Cas9) complex. The second crystal may have essentially the same coordinates discussed herein, however due to minor alterations in CRISPR-Cas9 system (e.g., from the Cas9 of such a system being e.g., S. pyogenes Cas9 versus being S. pyogenes Cas9), wherein “e.g., S. pyogenes Cas9” indicates that the Cas9 is a Cas9 and can be of or derived from S. pyogenes or an ortholog thereof), the crystal may form in a different space group.

The invention further involves, in place of or in addition to “in silico” methods, other “wet” methods, including high throughput screening of a binder (e.g., target nucleic acid molecule) and a candidate CRISPR-Cas9 system (e.g., S. pyogenes Cas9), or a candidate binder (e.g., target nucleic acid molecule) and a CRISPR-Cas9 system (e.g., S. pyogenes Cas9), or a candidate binder (e.g., target nucleic acid molecule) and a candidate CRISPR-Cas9 system (e.g., S. pyogenes Cas9) (the foregoing CRISPR-Cas9 system(s) with or without one or more functional group(s)), to select compounds with binding activity. Those pairs of binder and CRISPR-Cas9 system which show binding activity may be selected and further crystallized with the CRISPR-Cas9 crystal having a structure herein, e.g., by co-crystallization or by soaking, for X-ray analysis. The resulting X-ray structure may be compared with that of the herein Crystal Structure Table and the information in the Figures for a variety of purposes, e.g., for areas of overlap. Having designed, identified, or selected possible pairs of binder and CRISPR-Cas9 system by determining those which have favorable fitting properties, e.g., predicted strong attraction based on the pairs of binder and CRISPR-Cas9 crystral structure data herein, these possible pairs can then be screened by “wet” methods for activity. Consequently, in an aspect the invention can involve: obtaining or synthesizing the possible pairs; and contacting a binder (e.g., target nucleic acid molecule) and a candidate CRISPR-Cas9 system (e.g., S. pyogenes Cas9), or a candidate binder (e.g., target nucleic acid molecule) and a CRISPR-Cas9 system (e.g., S. pyogenes Cas9), or a candidate binder (e.g., target nucleic acid molecule) and a candidate CRISPR-Cas9 system (e.g., S. pyogenes Cas9) (the foregoing CRISPR-Cas9 system(s) with or without one or more functional group(s)) to determine ability to bind. In the latter step, the contacting is advantageously under conditions to determine function. Instead of, or in addition to, performing such an assay, the invention may comprise: obtaining or synthesizing complex(es) from said contacting and analyzing the complex(es), e.g., by X-ray diffraction or NMR or other means, to determine the ability to bind or interact. Detailed structural information can then be obtained about the binding, and in light of this information, adjustments can be made to the structure or functionality of a candidate CRISPR-Cas9 system or components thereof. These steps may be repeated and re-repeated as necessary. Alternatively or additionally, potential CRISPR-Cas9 systems from or in the foregoing methods can be with nucleic acid molecules in vivo, including without limitation by way of administration to an organism (including non-human animal and human) to ascertain or confirm function, including whether a desired outcome (e.g., reduction of symptoms, treatment) results therefrom.

The invention further involves a method of determining three dimensional structures of CRISPR-cas systems or complex(es) of unknown structure by using the structural co-ordinates of the herein Crystal Structure Table and the information in the Figures. For example, if X-ray crystallographic or NMR spectroscopic data are provided for a CRISPR-cas system or complex of unknown crystal structure, the structure of a CRISPR-Cas9 complex as defined in the herein Crystal Structure Table and the Figures may be used to interpret that data to provide a likely structure for the unknown system or complex by such techniques as by phase modeling in the case of X-ray crystallography. Thus, an inventive method can comprise: aligning a representation of the CRISPR-cas system or complex having an unknown crystral structure with an analogous representation of the CRISPR-cas(9) system and complex of the crystal structure herein to match homologous or analogous regions (e.g., homologous or analogous sequences); modeling the structure of the matched homologous or analogous regions (e.g., sequences) of the CRISPR-cas system or complex of unknown crystal structure based on the structure as defined in the herein Crystal Structure Table and/or in the Figures of the corresponding regions (e.g., sequences); and, determining a conformation (e.g. taking into consideration favorable interactions should be formed so that a low energy conformation is formed) for the unknown crystal structure which substantially preserves the structure of said matched homologous regions. “Homologous regions” describes, for example as to amino acids, amino acid residues in two sequences that are identical or have similar, e.g., aliphatic, aromatic, polar, negatively charged, or positively charged, side-chain chemical groups. Homologous regions as ot nucleic acid molecules can include at least 85% or 86% or 87% or 88% or 89% or 90% or 91% or 92% or 93% or 94% or 95% or 96% or 97% or 98% or 99% homology or identity. Identical and similar regions are sometimes described as being respectively “invariant” and “conserved” by those skilled in the art. Advantageously, the first and third steps are performed by computer modeling. Homology modeling is a technique that is well known to those skilled in the art (see, e.g., Greer, Science vol. 228 (1985) 1055, and Blundell et al. Eur J Biochem vol 172 (1988), 513). The computer representation of the conserved regions of the CRISPR-Cas9 crystral structure herein and those of a CRISPR-cas system of unknown crystral structure aid in the prediction and determination of the crystral structure of the CRISPR-cas system of unknown crystal structure.

Further still, the aspects of the invention which employ the CRISPR-Cas9 crystral structure in silico may be equally applied to new CRISPR-cas crystral structures divined by using the herein CRISPR-Cas9 crystral structure. In this fashion, a library of CRISPR-cas crystral structures can be obtained. Rational CRISPR-cas system design is thus provided by the instant invention. For instance, having determined a conformation or crystral structure of a CRISPR-cas system or complex, by the methods described herein, such a conformation may be used in a computer-based methods herein for determining the conformation or crystal structure of other CRISPR-cas systems or complexes whose crystral structures are yet unknown. Data from all of these crystal structures can be in a database, and the herein methods can be more robust by having herein comparisons involving the herein crystral structure or portions thereof be with respect to one or more crystal structures in the library. The invention further provides systems, such as computer systems, intended to generate structures and/or perform rational design of a CRISPR-cas system or complex. The system can contain: atomic co-ordinate data according to the herein Crystal Structure Table and the Figures or be derived therefrom e.g., by modeling, said data defining the three-dimensional structure of a CRISPR-cas system or complex or at least one domain or sub-domain thereof, or structure factor data therefor, said structure factor data being derivable from the atomic co-ordinate data of the herein Crystal Structure Table and the Figures. The invention also involves computer readable media with: atomic co-ordinate data according to the herein Crystal Structure Table and/or the Figures or derived therefrom e.g., by homology modeling, said data defining the three-dimensional structure of a CRISPR-cas system or complex or at least one domain or sub-domain thereof, or structure factor data therefor, said structure factor data being derivable from the atomic co-ordinate data of the herein Crystal Structure Table and/or the Figures. “Computer readable media” refers to any media which can be read and accessed directly by a computer, and includes, but is not limited to: magnetic storage media; optical storage media; electrical storage media; cloud storage and hybrids of these categories. By providing such computer readable media, the atomic co-ordinate data can be routinely accessed for modeling or other “in silico” methods. The invention further comprehends methods of doing business by providing access to such computer readable media, for instance on a subscription basis, via the Internet or a global communication/computer network; or, the computer system can be available to a user, on a subscription basis. A “computer system” refers to the hardware means, software means and data storage means used to analyze the atomic co-ordinate data of the present invention. The minimum hardware means of computer-based systems of the invention may comprise a central processing unit (CPU), input means, output means, and data storage means. Desirably, a display or monitor is provided to visualize structure data. The invention further comprehends methods of transmitting information obtained in any method or step thereof described herein or any information described herein, e.g., via telecommunications, telephone, mass communications, mass media, presentations, internet, email, etc. The crystal structures of the invention can be analyzed to generate Fourier electron density map(s) of CRISPR-cas systems or complexes; advantageously, the three-dimensional structure being as defined by the atomic co-ordinate data according to the herein Crystal Structure Table and/or the Figures. Fourier electron density maps can be calculated based on X-ray diffraction patterns. These maps can then be used to determine aspects of binding or other interactions. Electron density maps can be calculated using known programs such as those from the CCP4 computer package (Collaborative Computing Project, No. 4. The CCP4 Suite: Programs for Protein Crystallography, Acta Crystallographica, D50, 1994, 760-763). For map visualization and model building programs such as “QUANTA” (1994, San Diego, Calif.: Molecular Simulations, Jones et al., Acta Crystallography A47 (1991), 110-119) can be used.

The herein Crystal Structure Table (see Example 8) gives atomic co-ordinate data for a CRISPR-Cas9 (S. pyogenes), and lists each atom by a unique number; the chemical element and its position for each amino acid residue (as determined by electron density maps and antibody sequence comparisons), the amino acid residue in which the element is located, the chain identifier, the number of the residue, co-ordinates (e.g., X, Y, Z) which define with respect to the crystallographic axes the atomic position (in angstroms) of the respective atom, the occupancy of the atom in the respective position, “B”, isotropic displacement parameter (in angstroms²) which accounts for movement of the atom around its atomic center, and atomic number. See also Example 12, the text herein and the Figures.

In particular embodiments of the invention, the conformational variations in the crystal structures of the CRISPR-Cas9 system or of components of the CRISPR-Cas9 provide important and critical information about the flexibility or movement of protein structure regions relative to nucleotide (RNA or DNA) structure regions that may be important for CRISPR-Cas system function. The structural information provided for Cas9 (e.g. S. pyogenes Cas9) as the CRISPR enzyme in the present application may be used to further engineer and optimize the CRISPR-Cas system and this may be extrapolated to interrogate structure-function relationships in other CRISPR enzyme systems as well. An aspect of the invention relates to the crystal structure of S. pyogenes Cas9 in complex with sgRNA and its target DNA at 2.4 Å resolution. The structure revealed a bilobed architecture composed of target recognition and nuclease lobes, accommodating a sgRNA:DNA duplex in a positively-charged groove at their interface. The recognition lobe is essential for sgRNA and DNA binding and the nuclease lobe contains the HNH and RuvC nuclease domains, which are properly positioned for the cleavage of complementary and non-complementary strands of the target DNA, respectively. This high-resolution structure and the functional analyses provided herein elucidate the molecular mechanism of RNA-guided DNA targeting by Cas9, and provides an abundance of information for generating optimized CRISPR-Cas systems and components thereof.

In particular embodiments of the invention, the crystal structure provides a critical step towards understanding the molecular mechanism of RNA-guided DNA targeting by Cas9. The structural and functional analyses herein provide a useful scaffold for rational engineering of Cas9-based genome modulating technologies and may provide guidance as to Cas9-mediated recognition of PAM sequences on the target DNA or mismatch tolerance between the sgRNA:DNA duplex. Aspects of the invention also relate to truncation mutants, e.g. an S. pyogenes Cas9 truncation mutant may facilitate packaging of Cas9 into size-constrained viral vectors for in vivo and therapeutic applications. Similarly, future engineering of the PAM Interacting (PI) domain may allow programing of PAM specificity, improve target site recognition fidelity, and increase the versatility of the Cas9 genome engineering platform.

The invention comprehends optimized functional CRISPR-Cas enzyme systems. In particular the CRISPR enzyme comprises one or more mutations that converts it to a DNA binding protein to which functional domains exhibiting a function of interest may be recruited or appended or inserted or attached. In certain embodiments, the CRISPR enzyme comprises one or more mutations which include but are not limited to D10A, E762A, H840A, N854A, N863A or D986A (based on the amino acid position numbering of a S. pyogenes Cas9) and/or the one or more mutations is in a RuvC1 or HNH domain of the CRISPR enzyme or is a mutation as otherwise as discussed herein. In some embodiments, the CRISPR enzyme has one or more mutations in a catalytic domain, wherein when transcribed, the tracr mate sequence hybridizes to the tracr sequence and the guide sequence directs sequence-specific binding of a CRISPR complex to the target sequence, and wherein the enzyme further comprises a functional domain.

The structural information provided herein allows for interrogation of sgRNA (or chimeric RNA) interaction with the target DNA and the CRISPR enzyme (e.g. Cas9) permitting engineering or alteration of sgRNA structure to optimize functionality of the entire CRISPR-Cas system. For example, loops of the sgRNA may be extended, without colliding with the Cas9 protein by the insertion of distinct RNA loop(s) or distinct sequence(s) that may recruit adaptor proteins that can bind to the distinct RNA loop(s) or distinct sequence(s). The adaptor proteins may include but are not limited to orthogonal RNA-binding protein/aptamer combinations that exist within the diversity of bacteriophage coat proteins. A list of such coat proteins includes, but is not limited to: Qβ, F2, GA, fr, JP501, M12, R17, BZ13, JP34, JP500, KU1, M11, MX1, TW18, VK, SP, FI, ID2, NL95, TW19, AP205, ϕCb5, ϕCb8r, ϕCb12r, ϕCb23r, 7s and PRR1. These adaptor proteins or orthogonal RNA binding proteins can further recruit effector proteins or fusions which comprise one or more functional domains. In some embodiments, the functional domain may be selected from the group consisting of: transposase domain, integrase domain, recombinase domain, resolvase domain, invertase domain, protease domain, DNA methyltransferase domain, DNA hydroxylmethylase domain, DNA demethylase domain, histone acetylase domain, histone deacetylases domain, nuclease domain, repressor domain, activator domain, nuclear-localization signal domains, transcription-regulatory protein (or transcription complex recruiting) domain, cellular uptake activity associated domain, nucleic acid binding domain, antibody presentation domain, histone modifying enzymes, recruiter of histone modifying enzymes; inhibitor of histone modifying enzymes, histone methyltransferase, histone demethylase, histone kinase, histone phosphatase, histone ribosylase, histone deribosylase, histone ubiquitinase, histone deubiquitinase, histone biotinase and histone tail protease. In some preferred embodiments, the functional domain is a transcriptional activation domain, preferably VP64. In some embodiments, the functional domain is a transcription repression domain, preferably KRAB. In some embodiments, the transcription repression domain is SID, or concatemers of SID (eg SID4X). In some embodiments, the functional domain is an epigenetic modifying domain, such that an epigenetic modifying enzyme is provided. In some embodiments, the functional domain is an activation domain, which may be the P65 activation domain.

The invention will now be further described by way of the following non-limiting examples.

EXAMPLES

The following examples are given for the purpose of illustrating various embodiments of the invention and are not meant to limit the present invention in any fashion. The present examples, along with the methods described herein are presently representative of preferred embodiments, are exemplary, and are not intended as limitations on the scope of the invention. Changes therein and other uses which are encompassed within the spirit of the invention as defined by the scope of the claims will occur to those skilled in the art.

Example 1: CRISPR Complex Activity in the Nucleus of a Eukaryotic Cell

An example type II CRISPR system is the type II CRISPR locus from Streptococcus pyogenes SF370, which contains a cluster of four genes Cas9, Cas1, Cas2, and Csn1, as well as two non-coding RNA elements, tracrRNA and a characteristic array of repetitive sequences (direct repeats) interspaced by short stretches of non-repetitive sequences (spacers, about 30 bp each). In this system, targeted DNA double-strand break (DSB) is generated in four sequential steps (FIG. 2A). First, two non-coding RNAs, the pre-crRNA array and tracrRNA, are transcribed from the CRISPR locus. Second, tracrRNA hybridizes to the direct repeats of pre-crRNA, which is then processed into mature crRNAs containing individual spacer sequences. Third, the mature crRNA:tracrRNA complex directs Cas9 to the DNA target consisting of the protospacer and the corresponding PAM via heteroduplex formation between the spacer region of the crRNA and the protospacer DNA. Finally, Cas9 mediates cleavage of target DNA upstream of PAM to create a DSB within the protospacer (FIG. 2A). This example describes an example process for adapting this RNA-programmable nuclease system to direct CRISPR complex activity in the nuclei of eukaryotic cells.

Cell Culture and Transfection

Human embryonic kidney (HEK) cell line HEK 293FT (Life Technologies) was maintained in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's Medium (DMEM) supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum (HyClone), 2 mM GlutaMAX (Life Technologies), 100 U/mL penicillin, and 100 μg/mL streptomycin at 37° C. with 5% CO₂ incubation. Mouse neuro2A (N2A) cell line (ATCC) was maintained with DMEM supplemented with 5% fetal bovine serum (HyClone), 2 mM GlutaMAX (Life Technologies), 100 U/mL penicillin, and 100 μg/mL streptomycin at 37° C. with 5% CO₂.

HEK 293FT or N2A cells were seeded into 24-well plates (Corning) one day prior to transfection at a density of 200,000 cells per well. Cells were transfected using Lipofectamine 2000 (Life Technologies) following the manufacturer's recommended protocol. For each well of a 24-well plate a total of 800 ng of plasmids were used.

Surveyor Assay and Sequencing Analysis for Genome Modification

HEK 293FT or N2A cells were transfected with plasmid DNA as described above. After transfection, the cells were incubated at 37° C. for 72 hours before genomic DNA extraction. Genomic DNA was extracted using the QuickExtract DNA extraction kit (Epicentre) following the manufacturer's protocol. Briefly, cells were resuspended in QuickExtract solution and incubated at 65° C. for 15 minutes and 98° C. for 10 minutes. Extracted genomic DNA was immediately processed or stored at −20° C.

The genomic region surrounding a CRISPR target site for each gene was PCR amplified, and products were purified using QiaQuick Spin Column (Qiagen) following manufacturer's protocol. A total of 400 ng of the purified PCR products were mixed with 2 μl 10×Taq polymerase PCR buffer (Enzymatics) and ultrapure water to a final volume of 20 μl, and subjected to a re-annealing process to enable heteroduplex formation: 95° C. for 10 min, 95° C. to 85° C. ramping at −2° C./s, 85° C. to 25° C. at −0.25° C./s, and 25° C. hold for 1 minute. After re-annealing, products were treated with Surveyor nuclease and Surveyor enhancer S (Transgenomics) following the manufacturer's recommended protocol, and analyzed on 4-20% Novex TBE poly-acrylamide gels (Life Technologies). Gels were stained with SYBR Gold DNA stain (Life Technologies) for 30 minutes and imaged with a Gel Doc gel imaging system (Bio-rad). Quantification was based on relative band intensities, as a measure of the fraction of cleaved DNA. FIG. 7 provides a schematic illustration of this Surveyor assay.

Restriction fragment length polymorphism assay for detection of homologous recombination.

HEK 293FT and N2A cells were transfected with plasmid DNA, and incubated at 37° C. for 72 hours before genomic DNA extraction as described above. The target genomic region was PCR amplified using primers outside the homology arms of the homologous recombination (HR) template. PCR products were separated on a 1% agarose gel and extracted with MinElute GelExtraction Kit (Qiagen). Purified products were digested with HindIII (Fermentas) and analyzed on a 6% Novex TBE poly-acrylamide gel (Life Technologies).

RNA Secondary Structure Prediction and Analysis

RNA secondary structure prediction was performed using the online webserver RNAfold developed at Institute for Theoretical Chemistry at the University of Vienna, using the centroid structure prediction algorithm (see e.g. A. R. Gruber et al., 2008, Cell 106(1): 23-24; and P A Carr and G M Church, 2009, Nature Biotechnology 27(12): 1151-62).

RNA Purification

HEK 293FT cells were maintained and transfected as stated above. Cells were harvested by trypsinization followed by washing in phosphate buffered saline (PBS). Total cell RNA was extracted with TRI reagent (Sigma) following manufacturer's protocol. Extracted total RNA was quantified using Naonodrop (Thermo Scientific) and normalized to same concentration.

Northern Blot Analysis of crRNA and tracrRNA Expression in Mammalian Cells

RNAs were mixed with equal volumes of 2× loading buffer (Ambion), heated to 95° C. for 5 min, chilled on ice for 1 min, and then loaded onto 8% denaturing polyacrylamide gels (SequaGel, National Diagnostics) after pre-running the gel for at least 30 minutes. The samples were electrophoresed for 1.5 hours at 40 W limit. Afterwards, the RNA was transferred to Hybond N+ membrane (GE Healthcare) at 300 mA in a semi-dry transfer apparatus (Bio-rad) at room temperature for 1.5 hours. The RNA was crosslinked to the membrane using autocrosslink button on Stratagene UV Crosslinker the Stratalinker (Stratagene). The membrane was pre-hybridized in ULTRAhyb-Oligo Hybridization Buffer (Ambion) for 30 min with rotation at 42° C., and probes were then added and hybridized overnight. Probes were ordered from IDT and labeled with [gamma-³²P] ATP (Perkin Elmer) with T4 polynucleotide kinase (New England Biolabs). The membrane was washed once with pre-warmed (42° C.) 2×SSC, 0.5% SDS for 1 min followed by two 30 minute washes at 42° C. The membrane was exposed to a phosphor screen for one hour or overnight at room temperature and then scanned with a phosphorimager (Typhoon).

Bacterial CRISPR System Construction and Evaluation

CRISPR locus elements, including tracrRNA, Cas9, and leader were PCR amplified from Streptococcus pyogenes SF370 genomic DNA with flanking homology arms for Gibson Assembly. Two BsaI type IIS sites were introduced in between two direct repeats to facilitate easy insertion of spacers (FIG. 8 ). PCR products were cloned into EcoRV-digested pACYC184 downstream of the tet promoter using Gibson Assembly Master Mix (NEB). Other endogenous CRISPR system elements were omitted, with the exception of the last 50 bp of Csn2. Oligos (Integrated DNA Technology) encoding spacers with complimentary overhangs were cloned into the BsaI-digested vector pDC000 (NEB) and then ligated with T7 ligase (Enzymatics) to generate pCRISPR plasmids. Challenge plasmids containing spacers with PAM

expression in mammalian cells (expression constructs illustrated in FIG. 6A, with functionality as determined by results of the Surveyor assay shown in FIG. 6B). Transcription start sites are marked as +1, and transcription terminator and the sequence probed by northern blot are also indicated. Expression of processed tracrRNA was also confirmed by Northern blot. FIG. 6C shows results of a Northern blot analysis of total RNA extracted from 293FT cells transfected with U6 expression constructs carrying long or short tracrRNA, as well as SpCas9 and DR-EMX1(1)-DR. Left and right panels are from 293FT cells transfected without or with SpRNase III, respectively. U6 indicate loading control blotted with a probe targeting human U6 snRNA. Transfection of the short tracrRNA expression construct led to abundant levels of the processed form of tracrRNA (˜75 bp). Very low amounts of long tracrRNA are detected on the Northern blot.

To promote precise transcriptional initiation, the RNA polymerase III-based U6 promoter was selected to drive the expression of tracrRNA (FIG. 2C). Similarly, a U6 promoter-based construct was developed to express a pre-crRNA array consisting of a single spacer flanked by two direct repeats (DRs, also encompassed by the term “tracr-mate sequences”; FIG. 2C). The initial spacer was designed to target a 33-base-pair (bp) target site (30-bp protospacer plus a 3-bp CRISPR motif (PAM) sequence satisfying the NGG recognition motif of Cas9) in the human EMX1 locus (FIG. 2C), a key gene in the development of the cerebral cortex.

To test whether heterologous expression of the CRISPR system (SpCas9, SpRNase III, tracrRNA, and pre-crRNA) in mammalian cells can achieve targeted cleavage of mammalian chromosomes, BEK 293FT cells were transfected with combinations of CRISPR components. Since DSBs in mammalian nuclei are partially repaired by the non-homologous end joining (NHEJ) pathway, which leads to the formation of indels, the Surveyor assay was used to detect potential cleavage activity at the target EMX1 locus (FIG. 7 ) (see e.g. Guschin et al., 2010, Methods Mol Biol 649: 247). Co-transfection of all four CRISPR components was able to induce up to 5.0% cleavage in the protospacer (see FIG. 2D). Co-transfection of all CRISPR components minus SpRNase III also induced up to 4.7% indel in the protospacer, suggesting that there may be endogenous mammalian RNases that are capable of assisting with crRNA maturation, such as for example the related Dicer and Drosha enzymes. Removing any of the remaining three components abolished the genome cleavage activity of the CRISPR system (FIG. 2D). Sanger sequencing of amplicons containing the target locus verified the cleavage activity: in 43 sequenced clones, 5 mutated alleles (11.6%) were found. Similar experiments using a variety of guide sequences produced indel percentages as high as 29% (see FIGS. 3-6, 10, and 11 ). These results define a three-component system for efficient CRISPR-mediated genome modification in mammalian cells. To optimize the cleavage efficiency, Applicants also tested whether different isoforms of tracrRNA affected the cleavage efficiency and found that, in this example system, only the short (89-bp) transcript form was able to mediate cleavage of the human EMX1 genomic locus (FIG. 6B).

FIG. 12 provides an additional Northern blot analysis of crRNA processing in mammalian cells. FIG. 12A illustrates a schematic showing the expression vector for a single spacer flanked by two direct repeats (DR-EMX1(1)-DR). The 30 bp spacer targeting the human EMX1 locus protospacer 1 (see FIG. 6 ) and the direct repeat sequences are shown in the sequence beneath FIG. 12A. The line indicates the region whose reverse-complement sequence was used to generate Northern blot probes for EMX1(1) crRNA detection. FIG. 12B shows a Northern blot analysis of total RNA extracted from 293FT cells transfected with U6 expression constructs carrying DR-EMX1(1)-DR. Left and right panels are from 293FT cells transfected without or with SpRNase III respectively. DR-EMX1(1)-DR was processed into mature crRNAs only in the presence of SpCas9 and short tracrRNA and was not dependent on the presence of SpRNase III. The mature crRNA detected from transfected 293FT total RNA is ˜33 bp and is shorter than the 39-42 bp mature crRNA from S. pyogenes. These results demonstrate that a CRISPR system can be transplanted into eukaryotic cells and reprogrammed to facilitate cleavage of endogenous mammalian target polynucleotides.

FIG. 2 illustrates the bacterial CRISPR system described in this example. FIG. 2A illustrates a schematic showing the CRISPR locus 1 from Streptococcus pyogenes SF370 and a proposed mechanism of CRISPR-mediated DNA cleavage by this system. Mature crRNA processed from the direct repeat-spacer array directs Cas9 to genomic targets consisting of complimentary protospacers and a protospacer-adjacent motif (PAM). Upon target-spacer base pairing, Cas9 mediates a double-strand break in the target DNA. FIG. 2B illustrates engineering of S. pyogenes Cas9 (SpCas9) and RNase III (SpRNase III) with nuclear localization signals (NLSs) to enable import into the mammalian nucleus. FIG. 2C illustrates mammalian expression of SpCas9 and SpRNase III driven by the constitutive EF1α promoter and tracrRNA and pre-crRNA array (DR-Spacer-DR) driven by the RNA Pol3 promoter U6 to promote precise transcription initiation and termination. A protospacer from the human EMX1 locus with a satisfactory PAM sequence is used as the spacer in the pre-crRNA array. FIG. 2D illustrates surveyor nuclease assay for SpCas9-mediated minor insertions and deletions. SpCas9 was expressed with and without SpRNase III, tracrRNA, and a pre-crRNA array carrying the EMX1-target spacer. FIG. 2E illustrates a schematic representation of base pairing between target locus and EMX1-targeting crRNA, as well as an example chromatogram showing a micro deletion adjacent to the SpCas9 cleavage site. FIG. 2F illustrates mutated alleles identified from sequencing analysis of 43 clonal amplicons showing a variety of micro insertions and deletions. Dashes indicate deleted bases, and non-aligned or mismatched bases indicate insertions or mutations. Scale bar=10 μm.

To further simplify the three-component system, a chimeric crRNA-tracrRNA hybrid design was adapted, where a mature crRNA (comprising a guide sequence) may be fused to a partial tracrRNA via a stem-loop to mimic the natural crRNA:tracrRNA duplex. To increase co-delivery efficiency, a bicistronic expression vector was created to drive co-expression of a chimeric RNA and SpCas9 in transfected cells. In parallel, the bicistronic vectors were used to express a pre-crRNA (DR-guide sequence-DR) with SpCas9, to induce processing into crRNA with a separately expressed tracrRNA (compare FIG. 11B top and bottom). FIG. 8 provides schematic illustrations of bicistronic expression vectors for pre-crRNA array (FIG. 8A) or chimeric crRNA (represented by the short line downstream of the guide sequence insertion site and upstream of the EF1α promoter in FIG. 8B) with hSpCas9, showing location of various elements and the point of guide sequence insertion. The expanded sequence around the location of the guide sequence insertion site in FIG. 8B also shows a partial DR sequence (GTTTAGAGCTA) (SEQ ID NO: 39) and a partial tracrRNA sequence (TAGCAAGTTAAAATAAGGCTAGTCCGTTTTT) (SEQ ID NO: 40). Guide sequences can be inserted between BbsI sites using annealed oligonucleotides. Sequence design for the oligonucleotides are shown below the schematic illustrations in FIG. 8 , with appropriate ligation adapters indicated. WPRE represents the Woodchuck hepatitis virus post-transcriptional regulatory element. The efficiency of chimeric RNA-mediated cleavage was tested by targeting the same EMX1 locus described above. Using both Surveyor assay and Sanger sequencing of amplicons, Applicants confirmed that the chimeric RNA design facilitates cleavage of human EMX1 locus with approximately a 4.7% modification rate (FIG. 3 ).

Generalizability of CRISPR-mediated cleavage in eukaryotic cells was tested by targeting additional genomic loci in both human and mouse cells by designing chimeric RNA targeting multiple sites in the human EMX1 and PVALB, as well as the mouse Th loci. FIG. 13 illustrates the selection of some additional targeted protospacers in human PVALB (FIG. 13A) and mouse Th (FIG. 13B) loci. Schematics of the gene loci and the location of three protospacers within the last exon of each are provided. The underlined sequences include 30 bp of protospacer sequence and 3 bp at the 3′ end corresponding to the PAM sequences. Protospacers on the sense and anti-sense strands are indicated above and below the DNA sequences, respectively. A modification rate of 6.3% and 0.75% was achieved for the human PVALB and mouse Th loci respectively, demonstrating the broad applicability of the CRISPR system in modifying different loci across multiple organisms (FIG. 5 ). While cleavage was only detected with one out of three spacers for each locus using the chimeric constructs, all target sequences were cleaved with efficiency of indel production reaching 27% when using the co-expressed pre-crRNA arrangement (FIGS. 6 and 13 ).

FIG. 11 provides a further illustration that SpCas9 can be reprogrammed to target multiple genomic loci in mammalian cells. FIG. 11A provides a schematic of the human EMX1 locus showing the location of five protospacers, indicated by the underlined sequences. FIG. 11B provides a schematic of the pre-crRNA/trcrRNA complex showing hybridization between the direct repeat region of the pre-crRNA and tracrRNA (top), and a schematic of a chimeric RNA design comprising a 20 bp guide sequence, and tracr mate and tracr sequences consisting of partial direct repeat and tracrRNA sequences hybridized in a hairpin structure (bottom). Results of a Surveyor assay comparing the efficacy of Cas9-mediated cleavage at five protospacers in the human EMX1 locus is illustrated in FIG. 11C. Each protospacer is targeted using either processed pre-crRNA/tracrRNA complex (crRNA) or chimeric RNA (chiRNA).

Since the secondary structure of RNA can be crucial for intermolecular interactions, a structure prediction algorithm based on minimum free energy and Boltzmann-weighted structure ensemble was used to compare the putative secondary structure of all guide sequences used in the genome targeting experiment (see e.g. Gruber et al., 2008, Nucleic Acids Research, 36: W70). Analysis revealed that in most cases, the effective guide sequences in the chimeric crRNA context were substantially free of secondary structure motifs, whereas the ineffective guide sequences were more likely to form internal secondary structures that could prevent base pairing with the target protospacer DNA. It is thus possible that variability in the spacer secondary structure might impact the efficiency of CRISPR-mediated interference when using a chimeric crRNA.

Further vector designs for SpCas9 are shown in FIG. 22 , which illustrates single expression vectors incorporating a U6 promoter linked to an insertion site for a guide oligo, and a Cbh promoter linked to SpCas9 coding sequence. The vector shown in FIG. 22 b includes a tracrRNA coding sequence linked to an H1 promoter.

In the bacterial assay, all spacers facilitated efficient CRISPR interference (FIG. 3C). These results suggest that there may be additional factors affecting the efficiency of CRISPR activity in mammalian cells.

To investigate the specificity of CRISPR-mediated cleavage, the effect of single-nucleotide mutations in the guide sequence on protospacer cleavage in the mammalian genome was analyzed using a series of EMX1-targeting chimeric crRNAs with single point mutations (FIG. 3A). FIG. 3B illustrates results of a Surveyor nuclease assay comparing the cleavage efficiency of Cas9 when paired with different mutant chimeric RNAs. Single-base mismatch up to 12-bp 5′ of the PAM substantially abrogated genomic cleavage by SpCas9, whereas spacers with mutations at farther upstream positions retained activity against the original protospacer target (FIG. 3B). In addition to the PAM, SpCas9 has single-base specificity within the last 12-bp of the spacer. Furthermore, CRISPR is able to mediate genomic cleavage as efficiently as a pair of TALE nucleases (TALEN) targeting the same EMX1 protospacer. FIG. 3C provides a schematic showing the design of TALENs targeting EMX1, and FIG. 3D shows a Surveyor gel comparing the efficiency of TALEN and Cas9 (n=3).

Having established a set of components for achieving CRISPR-mediated gene editing in mammalian cells through the error-prone NHEJ mechanism, the ability of CRISPR to stimulate homologous recombination (HR), a high fidelity gene repair pathway for making precise edits in the genome, was tested. The wild type SpCas9 is able to mediate site-specific DSBs, which can be repaired through both NHEJ and HR. In addition, an aspartate-to-alanine substitution (D10A) in the RuvC I catalytic domain of SpCas9 was engineered to convert the nuclease into a nickase (SpCas9n; illustrated in FIG. 4A) (see e.g. Sapranausaks et al., 2011, Nucleic Acids Research, 39: 9275; Gasiunas et al., 2012, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 109:E2579), such that nicked genomic DNA undergoes the high-fidelity homology-directed repair (HDR). Surveyor assay confirmed that SpCas9n does not generate indels at the EMX1 protospacer target. As illustrated in FIG. 4B, co-expression of EMX1-targeting chimeric crRNA with SpCas9 produced indels in the target site, whereas co-expression with SpCas9n did not (n=3). Moreover, sequencing of 327 amplicons did not detect any indels induced by SpCas9n. The same locus was selected to test CRISPR-mediated HR by co-transfecting HEK 293FT cells with the chimeric RNA targeting EMX1, hSpCas9 or hSpCas9n, as well as a HR template to introduce a pair of restriction sites (HindIII and NheI) near the protospacer. FIG. 4C provides a schematic illustration of the HR strategy, with relative locations of recombination points and primer annealing sequences (arrows). SpCas9 and SpCas9n indeed catalyzed integration of the HR template into the EMX1 locus. PCR amplification of the target region followed by restriction digest with HindIII revealed cleavage products corresponding to expected fragment sizes (arrows in restriction fragment length polymorphism gel analysis shown in FIG. 4D), with SpCas9 and SpCas9n mediating similar levels of HR efficiencies. Applicants further verified HR using Sanger sequencing of genomic amplicons (FIG. 4E). These results demonstrate the utility of CRISPR for facilitating targeted gene insertion in the mammalian genome. Given the 14-bp (12-bp from the spacer and 2-bp from the PAM) target specificity of the wild type SpCas9, the availability of a nickase can significantly reduce the likelihood of off-target modifications, since single strand breaks are not substrates for the error-prone NHEJ pathway.

Expression constructs mimicking the natural architecture of CRISPR loci with arrayed spacers (FIG. 2A) were constructed to test the possibility of multiplexed sequence targeting. Using a single CRISPR array encoding a pair of EMX1- and PVALB-targeting spacers, efficient cleavage at both loci was detected (FIG. 4F, showing both a schematic design of the crRNA array and a Surveyor blot showing efficient mediation of cleavage). Targeted deletion of larger genomic regions through concurrent DSBs using spacers against two targets within EMX1 spaced by 119 bp was also tested, and a 1.6% deletion efficacy (3 out of 182 amplicons; FIG. 4G) was detected. This demonstrates that the CRISPR system can mediate multiplexed editing within a single genome.

Example 2: CRISPR System Modifications and Alternatives

The ability to use RNA to program sequence-specific DNA cleavage defines a new class of genome engineering tools for a variety of research and industrial applications. Several aspects of the CRISPR system can be further improved to increase the efficiency and versatility of CRISPR targeting. Optimal Cas9 activity may depend on the availability of free Mg²⁺ at levels higher than that present in the mammalian nucleus (see e.g. Jinek et al., 2012, Science, 337:816), and the preference for an NGG motif immediately downstream of the protospacer restricts the ability to target on average every 12-bp in the human genome (FIG. 9 , evaluating both plus and minus strands of human chromosomal sequences). Some of these constraints can be overcome by exploring the diversity of CRISPR loci across the microbial metagenome (see e.g. Makarova et al., 2011, Nat Rev Microbiol, 9:467). Other CRISPR loci may be transplanted into the mammalian cellular milieu by a process similar to that described in Example 1. For example, FIG. 10 illustrates adaptation of the Type II CRISPR system from CRISPR 1 of Streptococcus thermophilus LMD-9 for heterologous expression in mammalian cells to achieve CRISPR-mediated genome editing. FIG. 10A provides a Schematic illustration of CRISPR 1 from S. thermophilus LMD-9. FIG. 10B illustrates the design of an expression system for the S. thermophilus CRISPR system. Human codon-optimized hStCas9 is expressed using a constitutive EF1α promoter. Mature versions of tracrRNA and crRNA are expressed using the U6 promoter to promote precise transcription initiation. Sequences from the mature crRNA and tracrRNA are illustrated. A single base indicated by the lower case “a” in the crRNA sequence is used to remove the polyU sequence, which serves as a RNA polIII transcriptional terminator. FIG. 10C provides a schematic showing guide sequences targeting the human EMX1 locus. FIG. 10D shows the results of hStCas9-mediated cleavage in the target locus using the Surveyor assay. RNA guide spacers 1 and 2 induced 14% and 6.4%, respectively. Statistical analysis of cleavage activity across biological replica at these two protospacer sites is also provided in FIG. 5 . FIG. 14 provides a schematic of additional protospacer and corresponding PAM sequence targets of the S. thermophilus CRISPR system in the human EMX1 locus. Two protospacer sequences are highlighted and their corresponding PAM sequences satisfying NNAGAAW motif are indicated by underlining 3′ with respect to the corresponding highlighted sequence. Both protospacers target the anti-sense strand.

Example 3: Sample Target Sequence Selection Algorithm

A software program is designed to identify candidate CRISPR target sequences on both strands of an input DNA sequence based on desired guide sequence length and a CRISPR motif sequence (PAM) for a specified CRISPR enzyme. For example, target sites for Cas9 from S. pyogenes, with PAM sequences NGG, may be identified by searching for 5′-Nx-NGG-3′ both on the input sequence and on the reverse-complement of the input. Likewise, target sites for Cas9 of S. thermophilus CRISPRI, with PAM sequence NNAGAAW, may be identified by searching for 5′-Nx-NNAGAAW-3′ both on the input sequence and on the reverse-complement of the input. Likewise, target sites for Cas9 of S. thermophilus CRISPR3, with PAM sequence NGGNG, may be identified by searching for 5′-Nx-NGGNG-3′ both on the input sequence and on the reverse-complement of the input. The value “x” in Nx may be fixed by the program or specified by the user, such as 20.

Since multiple occurrences in the genome of the DNA target site may lead to nonspecific genome editing, after identifying all potential sites, the program filters out sequences based on the number of times they appear in the relevant reference genome. For those CRISPR enzymes for which sequence specificity is determined by a ‘seed’ sequence, such as the 11-12 bp 5′ from the PAM sequence, including the PAM sequence itself, the filtering step may be based on the seed sequence. Thus, to avoid editing at additional genomic loci, results are filtered based on the number of occurrences of the seed:PAM sequence in the relevant genome. The user may be allowed to choose the length of the seed sequence. The user may also be allowed to specify the number of occurrences of the seed:PAM sequence in a genome for purposes of passing the filter. The default is to screen for unique sequences. Filtration level is altered by changing both the length of the seed sequence and the number of occurrences of the sequence in the genome. The program may in addition or alternatively provide the sequence of a guide sequence complementary to the reported target sequence(s) by providing the reverse complement of the identified target sequence(s). An example visualization of some target sites in the human genome is provided in FIG. 18 .

Further details of methods and algorithms to optimize sequence selection can be found in U.S. application Ser. No. 61/064,798 (Attorney docket 44790.11.2022; Broad Reference BI-2012/084); incorporated herein by reference.

Example 4: Evaluation of Multiple Chimeric crRNA-tracrRNA Hybrids

This example describes results obtained for chimeric RNAs (chiRNAs; comprising a guide sequence, a tracr mate sequence, and a tracr sequence in a single transcript) having tracr sequences that incorporate different lengths of wild-type tracrRNA sequence. FIG. 16 a illustrates a schematic of a bicistronic expression vector for chimeric RNA and Cas9. Cas9 is driven by the CBh promoter and the chimeric RNA is driven by a U6 promoter. The chimeric guide RNA consists of a 20 bp guide sequence (Ns) joined to the tracr sequence (running from the first “U” of the lower strand to the end of the transcript), which is truncated at various positions as indicated. The guide and tracr sequences are separated by the tracr-mate sequence GUUUUAGAGCUA (SEQ ID NO: 41) followed by the loop sequence GAAA. Results of SURVEYOR assays for Cas9-mediated indels at the human EMX1 and PVALB loci are illustrated in FIGS. 16 b and 16 c , respectively. Arrows indicate the expected SURVEYOR fragments. ChiRNAs are indicated by their “+n” designation, and crRNA refers to a hybrid RNA where guide and tracr sequences are expressed as separate transcripts. Quantification of these results, performed in triplicate, are illustrated by histogram in FIGS. 17 a and 17 b , corresponding to FIGS. 16 b and 16 c , respectively (“N.D.” indicates no indels detected). Protospacer IDs and their corresponding genomic target, protospacer sequence, PAM sequence, and strand location are provided in Table D. Guide sequences were designed to be complementary to the entire protospacer sequence in the case of separate transcripts in the hybrid system, or only to the underlined portion in the case of chimeric RNAs.

TABLE D proto- SEQ spacer genomic ID ID target protospacer sequence (5′ to 3′) PAM NO: strand 1 EMX1 GGACATCGATGTCACCTCCAATGACTAGGG TGG 42 + 2 EMX1 CATTGGAGGTGACATCGATGTCCTCCCCAT TGG 43 - 3 EMX1 GGAAGGGCCTGAGTCCGAGCAGAAGAAGAA GGG 44 + 4 PVALB GGTGGCGAGAGGGGCCGAGATTGGGTGTTC AGG 45 + 5 PVALB ATGCAGGAGGGTGGCGAGAGGGGCCGAGAT TGG 46 +

Further details to optimize guide sequences can be found in U.S. application Ser. No. 61/836,127 (Attorney docket 44790.08.2022; Broad Reference BI-2013/004G); incorporated herein by reference.

Initially, three sites within the EMX1 locus in human HEK 293FT cells were targeted. Genome modification efficiency of each chiRNA was assessed using the SURVEYOR nuclease assay, which detects mutations resulting from DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) and their subsequent repair by the non-homologous end joining (NHEJ) DNA damage repair pathway. Constructs designated chiRNA(+n) indicate that up to the +n nucleotide of wild-type tracrRNA is included in the chimeric RNA construct, with values of 48, 54, 67, and 85 used for n. Chimeric RNAs containing longer fragments of wild-type tracrRNA (chiRNA(+67) and chiRNA(+85)) mediated DNA cleavage at all three EMX1 target sites, with chiRNA(+85) in particular demonstrating significantly higher levels of DNA cleavage than the corresponding crRNA/tracrRNA hybrids that expressed guide and tracr sequences in separate transcripts (FIGS. 16 b and 17 a ). Two sites in the PVALB locus that yielded no detectable cleavage using the hybrid system (guide sequence and tracr sequence expressed as separate transcripts) were also targeted using chiRNAs. chiRNA(+67) and chiRNA(+85) were able to mediate significant cleavage at the two PVALB protospacers (FIGS. 16 c and 17 b ).

For all five targets in the EMX1 and PVALB loci, a consistent increase in genome modification efficiency with increasing tracr sequence length was observed. Without wishing to be bound by any theory, the secondary structure formed by the 3′ end of the tracrRNA may play a role in enhancing the rate of CRISPR complex formation.

Example 5: Cas9 Diversity

The CRISPR-Cas system is an adaptive immune mechanism against invading exogenous DNA employed by diverse species across bacteria and archaea. The type II CRISPR-Cas9 system consists of a set of genes encoding proteins responsible for the “acquisition” of foreign DNA into the CRISPR locus, as well as a set of genes encoding the “execution” of the DNA cleavage mechanism; these include the DNA nuclease (Cas9), a non-coding transactivating cr-RNA (tracrRNA), and an array of foreign DNA-derived spacers flanked by direct repeats (crRNAs). Upon maturation by Cas9, the tracRNA and crRNA duplex guide the Cas9 nuclease to a target DNA sequence specified by the spacer guide sequences, and mediates double-stranded breaks in the DNA near a short sequence motif in the target DNA that is required for cleavage and specific to each CRISPR-Cas system. The type II CRISPR-Cas systems are found throughout the bacterial kingdom and highly diverse in in Cas9 protein sequence and size, tracrRNA and crRNA direct repeat sequence, genome organization of these elements, and the motif requirement for target cleavage. One species may have multiple distinct CRISPR-Cas systems.

Applicants evaluated 207 putative Cas9s from bacterial species identified based on sequence homology to known Cas9s and structures orthologous to known subdomains, including the HNH endonuclease domain and the RuvC endonuclease domains [information from the Eugene Koonin and Kira Makarova]. Phylogenetic analysis based on the protein sequence conservation of this set revealed five families of Cas9s, including three groups of large Cas9s (˜1400 amino acids) and two of small Cas9s (˜1100 amino acids) (see FIGS. 19 and 20A-F).

Further details of Cas9s and mutations of the Cas9 enzyme to convert into a nickase or DNA binding protein and use of same with altered functionality can be found in U.S. application Ser. Nos. 61/836,101 and 61/835,936 (Attorney docket 44790.09.2022 and 4790.07.2022 and Broad Reference BI-2013/004E and BI-2013/004F respectively) incorporated herein by reference.

Example 6: Cas9 Orthologs

Applicants analyzed Cas9 orthologs to identify the relevant PAM sequences and the corresponding chimeric guide RNA. Having an expanded set of PAMs provides broader targeting across the genome and also significantly increases the number of unique target sites and provides potential for identifying novel Cas9s with increased levels of specificity in the genome.

The specificity of Cas9 orthologs can be evaluated by testing the ability of each Cas9 to tolerate mismatches between the guide RNA and its DNA target. For example, the specificity of SpCas9 has been characterized by testing the effect of mutations in the guide RNA on cleavage efficiency. Libraries of guide RNAs were made with single or multiple mismatches between the guide sequence and the target DNA. Based on these findings, target sites for SpCas9 can be selected based on the following guidelines:

To maximize SpCas9 specificity for editing a particular gene, one should choose a target site within the locus of interest such that potential ‘off-target’ genomic sequences abide by the following four constraints: First and foremost, they should not be followed by a PAM with either 5′-NGG or NAG sequences. Second, their global sequence similarity to the target sequence should be minimized. Third, a maximal number of mismatches should lie within the PAM-proximal region of the off-target site. Finally, a maximal number of mismatches should be consecutive or spaced less than four bases apart.

Similar methods can be used to evaluate the specificity of other Cas9 orthologs and to establish criteria for the selection of specific target sites within the genomes of target species. As mentioned previously phylogenetic analysis based on the protein sequence conservation of this set revealed five families of Cas9s, including three groups of large Cas9s (˜1400 amino acids) and two of small Cas9s (˜1100 amino acids) (see FIGS. 19 and 20A-F). Further details on Cas orthologs can be found in U.S. application Ser. Nos. 61/836,101 and 61/835,936 (Attorney docket 44790.09.2022 and 4790.07.2022 and Broad Reference BI-2013/004E and BI-2013/004F respectively) incorporated herein by reference.

Example 7: Engineering of Plants (Micro-Algae) Using Cas9 to Target and Manipulate Plant Genes

Methods of Delivering Cas9

Method 1: Applicants deliver Cas9 and guide RNA using a vector that expresses Cas9 under the control of a constitutive promoter such as Hsp70A-Rbc S2 or Beta2-tubulin.

Method 2: Applicants deliver Cas9 and T7 polymerase using vectors that expresses Cas9 and T7 polymerase under the control of a constitutive promoter such as Hsp70A-Rbc S2 or Beta2-tubulin. Guide RNA will be delivered using a vector containing T7 promoter driving the guide RNA.

Method 3: Applicants deliver Cas9 mRNA and in vitro transcribed guide RNA to algae cells. RNA can be in vitro transcribed. Cas9 mRNA will consist of the coding region for Cas9 as well as 3′UTR from Cop1 to ensure stabilization of the Cas9 mRNA.

For Homologous recombination, Applicants provide an additional homology directed repair template.

Sequence for a cassette driving the expression of Cas9 under the control of beta-2 tubulin promoter, followed by the 3′ UTR of Cop1.

(SEQ ID NO: 47) TCTTTCTTGCGCTATGACACTTCCAGCAAAAGGTAGGGGGGCTGCGAGA CGGCTTCCCGGCGCTGCATGCAACACCGATGATGCTTCGACCCCCCGAAGCTCCTTC GGGGCTGCATGGGCGCTCCGATGCCGCTCCAGGGCGAGCGCTGTTTAAATAGCCAG GCCCCCGATTGCAAAGACATTATAGCGAGCTACCAAAGCCATATTCAAACACCTAG ATCACTACCACTTCTACACAGGCCACTCGAGCTTGTGATCGCACTCCGCTAAGGGGG CGCCTCTTCCTCTTCGTTTCAGTCACAACCCGCAAACATGTACCCATACGATGTTCCA GATTACGCTTCGCCGAAGAAAAAGCGCAAGGTCGAAGCGTCCGACAAGAAGTACAG CATCGGCCTGGACATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGCTGGGCCGTGATCACCGACGAGT ACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCAACACCGACCGGCACAGCATC AAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACAGCGGCGAAACAGCCGAGGCCAC CCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACACCAGACGGAAGAACCGGATCTGC TATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAGGTGGACGACAGCTTCTTCCAC AGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGATAAGAAGCACGAGCGGCACCCCAT CTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACGAGAAGTACCCCACCATCTACC ACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAAGGCCGACCTGCGGCTGATCTAT CTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCACTTCCTGATCGAGGGCGACCTG AACCCCGACAACAGCGACGTGGACAAGCTGTTCATCCAGCTGGTGCAGACCTACAA CCAGCTGTTCGAGGAAAACCCCATCAACGCCAGCGGCGTGGACGCCAAGGCCATCC TGTCTGCCAGACTGAGCAAGAGCAGACGGCTGGAAAATCTGATCGCCCAGCTGCCC GGCGAGAAGAAGAATGGCCTGTTCGGCAACCTGATTGCCCTGAGCCTGGGCCTGAC CCCCAACTTCAAGAGCAACTTCGACCTGGCCGAGGATGCCAAACTGCAGCTGAGCA AGGACACCTACGACGACGACCTGGACAACCTGCTGGCCCAGATCGGCGACCAGTAC GCCGACCTGTTTCTGGCCGCCAAGAACCTGTCCGACGCCATCCTGCTGAGCGACATC CTGAGAGTGAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCCCTGAGCGCCTCTATGATCAAGAG ATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCTGAAAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGC TGCCTGAGAAGTACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAGAGCAAGAACGGCTACGCCGGC TACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTACAAGTTCATCAAGCCCATCCT GGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGTGAAGCTGAACAGAGAGGACCTG CTGCGGAAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATCCCCCACCAGATCCACCTGGG AGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATTTTTACCCATTCCTGAAGGACAA CCGGGAAAAGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCATCCCCTACTACGTGGGCCCTCT GGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACCAGAAAGAGCGAGGAAACCATC ACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAAGGGCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCAT CGAGCGGATGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCAACGAGAAGGTGCTGCCCAAGC ACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTATAACGAGCTGACCAAAGTGAAATAC GTGACCGAGGGAATGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCGAGCAGAAAAAGGCCA TCGTGGACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTGAAGCAGCTGAAAGAG GACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCTTCGACTCCGTGGAAATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGAT CGGTTCAACGCCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAAAATTATCAAGGACAA GGACTTCCTGGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGACATTCTGGAAGATATCGTGCTGACCC TGACACTGTTTGAGGACAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTGAAAACCTATGCCCAC CTGTTCGACGACAAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGAGATACACCGGCTGGGG CAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGCTGATCAACGGCATCCGGGACAAGCAGTCCGGCAAGACA ATCCTGGATTTCCTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAACTTCATGCAGCTGATC CACGACGACAGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAGAAAGCCCAGGTGTCCGGCCA GGGCGATAGCCTGCACGAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCAGCCCCGCCATTAAGA AGGGCATCCTGCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGTGAAAGTGATGGGCCGG CACAAGCCCGAGAACATCGTGATCGAAATGGCCAGAGAGAACCAGACCACCCAGA AGGGACAGAAGAACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGAAGAGGGCATCAAAGA GCTGGGCAGCCAGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGTGGAAAACACCCAGCTGCAGAACG AGAAGCTGTACCTGTACTACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGGATATGTACGTGGACCAGGAA CTGGACATCAACCGGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACCATATCGTGCCTCAGAGCTTT CTGAAGGACGACTCCATCGACAACAAGGTGCTGACCAGAAGCGACAAGAACCGGG GCAAGAGCGACAACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGAAGATGAAGAACTACTGG CGGCAGCTGCTGAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGAGAAAGTTCGACAATCTGACCAA GGCCGAGAGAGGCGGCCTGAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGCTTCATCAAGAGACAG CTGGTGGAAACCCGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGATCCTGGACTCCCGGAT GAACACTAAGTACGACGAGAATGACAAGCTGATCCGGGAAGTGAAAGTGATCACCC TGAAGTCCAAGCTGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGTTTTACAAAGTGCGCG AGATCAACAACTACCACCACGCCCACGACGCCTACCTGAACGCCGTCGTGGGAACC GCCCTGATCAAAAAGTACCCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGACTACAA GGTGTACGACGTGCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGGAAATCGGCAAGGCT ACCGCCAAGTACTTCTTCTACAGCAACATCATGAACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGATTACC CTGGCCAACGGCGAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAAACGGCGAAACCGG GGAGATCGTGTGGGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGTGCGGAAAGTGCTGAGCA TGCCCCAAGTGAATATCGTGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCAGCAAA GAGTCTATCCTGCCCAAGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCCAGAAAGAAGGACTG GGACCCTAAGAAGTACGGCGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGTGGCCTATTCTGTGCTGGT GGTGGCCAAAGTGGAAAAGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAAGAGCTG CTGGGGATCACCATCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAATCCCATCGACTTTCT GGAAGCCAAGGGCTACAAAGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCTAAGT ACTCCCTGTTCGAGCTGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGGCCTCTGCCGGCGAA CTGCAGAAGGGAAACGAACTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTGAACTTCCTGTACCTG GCCAGCCACTATGAGAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAGAAACAGCT GTTTGTGGAACAGCACAAGCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCGAGCAGATCAGCGAGT TCTCCAAGAGAGTGATCCTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGCCTACA ACAAGCACCGGGATAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAATATCATCCACCTGTTT ACCCTGACCAATCTGGGAGCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACCATCGAC CGGAAGAGGTACACCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGATCCACCAGAG CATCACCGGCCTGTACGAGACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCGACAGCC CCAAGAAGAAGAGAAAGGTGGAGGCCAGCTAAGGATCCGGCAAGACTGGCCCCGC TTGGCAACGCAACAGTGAGCCCCTCCCTAGTGTGTTTGGGGATGTGACTATGTATTC GTGTGTTGGCCAACGGGTCAACCCGAACAGATTGATACCCGCCTTGGCATTTCCTGT CAGAATGTAACGTCAGTTGATGGTACT

Sequence for a cassette driving the expression of T7 polymerase under the control of beta-2 tubulin promoter, followed by the 3′ UTR of Cop1:

(SEQ ID NO: 48) TCTTTCTTGCGCTATGACACTTCCAGCAAAAGGTAGGGCGGGCTGCGAGA CGGCTTCCCGGCGCTGCATGCAACACCGATGATGCTTCGACCCCCCGAAGCTCCTTC GGGGCTGCATGGGCGCTCCGATGCCGCTCCAGGGCGAGCGCTGTTTAAATAGCCAG GCCCCCGATTGCAAAGACATTATAGCGAGCTACCAAAGCCATATTCAAACACCTAG ATCACTACCACTTCTACACAGGCCACTCGAGCTTGTGATCGCACTCCGCTAAGGGGG CGCCTCTTCCTCTTCGTTTCAGTCACAACCCGCAAACatgcctaagaagaagaggaaggttaacacgatt aacatcgctaagaacgacttctctgacatcgaactggctgctatcccgttcaacactctggctgaccattacggtgagcgtttagctcgcgaa cagttggcccttgagcatgagtcttacgagatgggtgaagcacgcttccgcaagatgtttgagcgtcaacttaaagctggtgaggttgcggat aacgctgccgccaagcctctcatcactaccctactccctaagatgattgcacgcatcaacgactggtttgaggaagtgaaagctaagcgcg gcaagcgcccgacagccttccagttcctgcaagaaatcaagccggaagccgtagcgtacatcaccattaagaccactctggcttgcctaac cagtgctgacaatacaaccgttcaggctgtagcaagcgcaatcggtcgggccattgaggacgaggctcgcttcggtcgtatccgtgacctt gaagctaagcacttcaagaaaaacgttgaggaacaactcaacaagcgcgtagggcacgtctacaagaaagcatttatgcaagttgtcgag gctgacatgctctctaagggtctactcggtggcgaggcgtggtcttcgtggcataaggaagactctattcatgtaggagtacgctgcatcgag atgctcattgagtcaaccggaatggttagcttacaccgccaaaatgctggcgtagtaggtcaagactctgagactatcgaactcgcacctga atacgctgaggctatcgcaacccgtgcaggtgcgctggctggcatctctccgatgttccaaccttgcgtagttcctcctaagccgtggactgg cattactggtggtggctattgggctaacggtcgtcgtcctctggcgctggtgcgtactcacagtaagaaagcactgatgcgctacgaagacg tttacatgcctgaggtgtacaaagcgattaacattgcgcaaaacaccgcatggaaaatcaacaagaaagtcctagcggtcgccaacgtaatc accaagtggaagcattgtccggtcgaggacatccctgcgattgagcgtgaagaactcccgatgaaaccggaagacatcgacatgaatcct gaggctctcaccgcgtggaaacgtgctgccgctgctgtgtaccgcaaggacaaggctcgcaagtctcgccgtatcagccttgagttcatgc ttgagcaagccaataagtttgctaaccataaggccatctggttcccttacaacatggactggcgcggtcgtgtttacgctgtgtcaatgttcaac ccgcaaggtaacgatatgaccaaaggactgcttacgctggcgaaaggtaaaccaatcggtaaggaaggttactactggctgaaaatccac ggtgcaaactgtgcgggtgtcgacaaggttccgttccctgagcgcatcaagttcattgaggaaaaccacgagaacatcatggcttgcgctaa gtctccactggagaacacttggtgggctgagcaagattctccgttctgcttccttgcgttctgctttgagtacgctggggtacagcaccacggc ctgagctataactgctcccttccgctggcgtttgacgggtcttgctctggcatccagcacttctccgcgatgctccgagatgaggtaggtggtc gcgcggttaacttgcttcctagtgaaaccgttcaggacatctacgggattgttgctaagaaagtcaacgagattctacaagcagacgcaatca atgggaccgataacgaagtagttaccgtgaccgatgagaacactggtgaaatctctgagaaagtcaagctgggcactaaggcactggctg gtcaatggctggcttacggtgttactcgcagtgtgactaagcgttcagtcatgacgctggcttacgggtccaaagagttcggcttccgtcaac aagtgctggaagataccattcagccagctattgattccggcaagggtctgatgttcactcagccgaatcaggctgctggatacatggctaag ctgatttgggaatctgtgagcgtgacggtggtagctgcggttgaagcaatgaactggcttaagtctgctgctaagctgctggctgctgaggtc aaagataagaagactggagagattcttcgcaagcgttgcgctgtgcattgggtaactcctgatggtttccctgtgtggcaggaatacaagaa gcctattcagacgcgcttgaacctgatgttcctcggtcagttccgcttacagcctaccattaacaccaacaaagatagcgagattgatgcaca caaacaggagtctggtatcgctcctaactttgtacacagccaagacggtagccaccttcgtaagactgtagtgtgggcacacgagaagtac ggaatcgaatcttttgcactgattcacgactccttcggtacgattccggctgacgctgcgaacctgttcaaagcagtgcgcgaaactatggttg acacatatgagtcttgtgatgtactggctgatttctacgaccagttcgctgaccagttgcacgagtctcaattggacaaaatgccagcacttcc ggctaaaggtaacttgaacctccgtgacatcttagagtcggacttcgcgttcgcgtaaGGATCCGGCAAGACTGGCCCC GCTTGGCAACGCAACAGTGAGCCCCTCCCTAGTGTGTTTGGGGATGTGACTATGTAT TCGTGTGTTGGCCAACGGGTCAACCCGAACAGATTGATACCCGCCTTGGCATTTCCT GTCAGAATGTAACGTCAGTTGATGGTACT

Sequence of guide RNA driven by the T7 promoter (T7 promoter, Ns represent targeting sequence):

(SEQ ID NO: 49) GaaatTAATACGACTCACTATANNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNgttttag agctaGAAAtagcaagttaaaataaggctagtccgttatcaacttgaaa aagtggcaccgagtcggtgcttttttt

Gene Delivery:

Chlamydomonas reinhardtii strain CC-124 and CC-125 from the Chlamydomonas Resource Center will be used for electroporation. Electroporation protocol follows standard recommended protocol from the GeneArt Chlamydomonas Engineering kit.

Also, Applicants generate a line of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii that expresses Cas9 constitutively. This can be done by using pChlamy1 (linearized using PvuI) and selecting for hygromycin resistant colonies. Sequence for pChlamy1 containing Cas9 is below. In this way to achieve gene knockout one simply needs to deliver RNA for the guideRNA. For homologous recombination Applicants deliver guideRNA as well as a linearized homologous recombination template.

pChlamy1-Cas9: (SEQ ID NO: 50) TGCGGTATTTCACACCGCATCAGGTGGCACTTTTCGGGGAAATGTGCGCG GAACCCCTATTTGTTTATTTTTCTAAATACATTCAAATATGTATCCGCTCATGAGATT ATCAAAAAGGATCTTCACCTAGATCCTTTTAAATTAAAAATGAAGTTTTAAATCAAT CTAAAGTATATATGAGTAAACTTGGTCTGACAGTTACCAATGCTTAATCAGTGAGGC ACCTATCTCAGCGATCTGTCTATTTCGTTCATCCATAGTTGCCTGACTCCCCGTCGTG TAGATAACTACGATACGGGAGGGCTTACCATCTGGCCCCAGTGCTGCAATGATACCG CGAGACCCACGCTCACCGGCTCCAGATTTATCAGCAATAAACCAGCCAGCCGGAAG GGCCGAGCGCAGAAGTGGTCCTGCAACTTTATCCGCCTCCATCCAGTCTATTAATTG TTGCCGGGAAGCTAGAGTAAGTAGTTCGCCAGTTAATAGTTTGCGCAACGTTGTTGC CATTGCTACAGGCATCGTGGTGTCACGCTCGTCGTTTGGTATGGCTTCATTCAGCTCC GGTTCCCAACGATCAAGGCGAGTTACATGATCCCCCATGTTGTGCAAAAAAGCGGTT AGCTCCTTCGGTCCTCCGATCGTTGTCAGAAGTAAGTTGGCCGCAGTGTTATCACTC ATGGTTATGGCAGCACTGCATAATTCTCTTACTGTCATGCCATCCGTAAGATGCTTTT CTGTGACTGGTGAGTACTCAACCAAGTCATTCTGAGAATAGTGTATGCGGCGACCGA GTTGCTCTTGCCCGGCGTCAATACGGGATAATACCGCGCCACATAGCAGAACTTTAA AAGTGCTCATCATTGGAAAACGTTCTTCGGGGCGAAAACTCTCAAGGATCTTACCGC TGTTGAGATCCAGTTCGATGTAACCCACTCGTGCACCCAACTGATCTTCAGCATCTTT TACTTTCACCAGCGTTTCTGGGTGAGCAAAAACAGGAAGGCAAAATGCCGCAAAAA AGGGAATAAGGGCGACACGGAAATGTTGAATACTCATACTCTTCCTTTTTCAATATT ATTGAAGCATTTATCAGGGTTATTGTCTCATGACCAAAATCCCTTAACGTGAGTTTTC GTTCCACTGAGCGTCAGACCCCGTAGAAAAGATCAAAGGATCTTCTTGAGATCCTTT TTTTCTGCGCGTAATCTGCTGCTTGCAAACAAAAAAACCACCGCTACCAGCGGTGGT TTGTTTGCCGGATCAAGAGCTACCAACTCTTTTTCCGAAGGTAACTGGCTTCAGCAG AGCGCAGATACCAAATACTGTTCTTCTAGTGTAGCCGTAGTTAGGCCACCACTTCAA GAACTCTGTAGCACCGCCTACATACCTCGCTCTGCTAATCCTGTTACCAGTGGCTGTT GCCAGTGGCGATAAGTCGTGTCTTACCGGGTTGGACTCAAGACGATAGTTACCGGAT AAGGCGCAGCGGTCGGGCTGAACGGGGGGTTCGTGCACACAGCCCAGCTTGGAGCG AACGACCTACACCGAACTGAGATACCTACAGCGTGAGCTATGAGAAAGCGCCACGC TTCCCGAAGGGAGAAAGGCGGACAGGTATCCGGTAAGCGGCAGGGTCGGAACAGG AGAGCGCACGAGGGAGCTTCCAGGGGGAAACGCCTGGTATCTTTATAGTCCTGTCG GGTTTCGCCACCTCTGACTTGAGCGTCGATTTTTGTGATGCTCGTCAGGGGGGCGGA GCCTATGGAAAAACGCCAGCAACGCGGCCTTTTTACGGTTCCTGGCCTTTTGCTGGC CTTTTGCTCACATGTTCTTTCCTGCGTTATCCCCTGATTCTGTGGATAACCGTATTACC GCCTTTGAGTGAGCTGATACCGCTCGCCGCAGCCGAACGACCGAGCGCAGCGAGTC AGTGAGCGAGGAAGCGGTCGCTGAGGCTTGACATGATTGGTGCGTATGTTTGTATGA AGCTACAGGACTGATTTGGCGGGCTATGAGGGCGGGGGAAGCTCTGGAAGGGCCGC GATGGGGCGCGCGGCGTCCAGAAGGCGCCATACGGCCCGCTGGCGGCACCCATCCG GTATAAAAGCCCGCGACCCCGAACGGTGACCTCCACTTTCAGCGACAAACGAGCAC TTATACATACGCGACTATTCTGCCGCTATACATAACCACTCAGCTAGCTTAAGATCC CATCAAGCTTGCATGCCGGGCGCGCCAGAAGGAGCGCAGCCAAACCAGGATGATGT TTGATGGGGTATTTGAGCACTTGCAACCCTTATCCGGAAGCCCCCTGGCCCACAAAG GCTAGGCGCCAATGCAAGCAGTTCGCATGCAGCCCCTGGAGCGGTGCCCTCCTGAT AAACCGGCCAGGGGGCCTATGTTCTTTACTTTTTTACAAGAGAAGTCACTCAACATC TTAAAATGGCCAGGTGAGTCGACGAGCAAGCCCGGCGGATCAGGCAGCGTGCTTGC AGATTTGACTTGCAACGCCCGCATTGTGTCGACGAAGGCTTTTGGCTCCTCTGTCGCT GTCTCAAGCAGCATCTAACCCTGCGTCGCCGTTTCCATTTGCAGGAGATTCGAGGTA CCATGTACCCATACGATGTTCCAGATTACGCTTCGCCGAAGAAAAAGCGCAAGGTC GAAGCGTCCGACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGACATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGG CTGGGCCGTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGG GCAACACCGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGAC AGCGGCGAAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACA CCAGACGGAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCC AAGGTGGACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGA TAAGAAGCACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACC ACGAGAAGTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGAC AAGGCCGACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGC CACTTCCTGATCGAGGGCGACCTGAACCCCGACAACAGCGACGTGGACAAGCTGTT CATCCAGCTGGTGCAGACCTACAACCAGCTGTTCGAGGAAAACCCCATCAACGCCA GCGGCGTGGACGCCAAGGCCATCCTGTCTGCCAGACTGAGCAAGAGCAGACGGCTG GAAAATCTGATCGCCCAGCTGCCCGGCGAGAAGAAGAATGGCCTGTTCGGCAACCT GATTGCCCTGAGCCTGGGCCTGACCCCCAACTTCAAGAGCAACTTCGACCTGGCCGA GGATGCCAAACTGCAGCTGAGCAAGGACACCTACGACGACGACCTGGACAACCTGC TGGCCCAGATCGGCGACCAGTACGCCGACCTGTTTCTGGCCGCCAAGAACCTGTCCG ACGCCATCCTGCTGAGCGACATCCTGAGAGTGAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCC CTGAGCGCCTCTATGATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCT GAAAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACC AGAGCAAGAACGGCTACGCCGGCTACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTC TACAAGTTCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGT GAAGCTGAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGC ATCCCCCACCAGATCCACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGA TTTTTACCCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCG CATCCCCTACTACGTGGGCCCTCTGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGA CCAGAAAGAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAA GGGCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGATGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGC CCAACGAGAAGGTGCTGCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTAT AACGAGCTGACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAATGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCT GAGCGGCGAGCAGAAAAAGGCCATCGTGGACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAA GTGACCGTGAAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCTTCGACTC CGTGGAAATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCAACGCCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACG ATCTGCTGAAAATTATCAAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGAC ATTCTGGAAGATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGAGGACAGAGAGATGATCGA GGAACGGCTGAAAACCTATGCCCACCTGTTCGACGACAAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGA AGCGGCGGAGATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGCTGATCAACGGCATC CGGGACAAGCAGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGATTTCCTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGC CAACAGAAACTTCATGCAGCTGATCCACGACGACAGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACA TCCAGAAAGCCCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCTGCACGAGCACATTGCCAAT CTGGCCGGCAGCCCCGCCATTAAGAAGGGCATCCTGCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGA CGAGCTCGTGAAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCCGAGAACATCGTGATCGAAATGG CCAGAGAGAACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAGAAGAACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAA GCGGATCGAAGAGGGCATCAAAGAGCTGGGCAGCCAGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCC GTGGAAAACACCCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAAGCTGTACCTGTACTACCTGCAGAATGG GCGGGATATGTACGTGGACCAGGAACTGGACATCAACCGGCTGTCCGACTACGATG TGGACCATATCGTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAAGGACGACTCCATCGACAACAAGGTGC TGACCAGAAGCGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAGAGCGACAACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGT CGTGAAGAAGATGAAGAACTACTGGCGGCAGCTGCTGAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCC AGAGAAAGTTCGACAATCTGACCAAGGCCGAGAGAGGCGGCCTGAGCGAACTGGAT AAGGCCGGCTTCATCAAGAGACAGCTGGTGGAAACCCGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGT GGCACAGATCCTGGACTCCCGGATGAACACTAAGTACGACGAGAATGACAAGCTGA TCCGGGAAGTGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCAAGCTGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAG GATTTCCAGTTTTACAAAGTGCGCGAGATCAACAACTACCACCACGCCCACGACGCC TACCTGAACGCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATCAAAAAGTACCCTAAGCTGGAAAG CGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGACTACAAGGTGTACGACGTGCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGA GCGAGCAGGAAATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCCAAGTACTTCTTCTACAGCAACATCATG AACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCAACGGCGAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCT GATCGAGACAAACGGCGAAACCGGGGAGATCGTGTGGGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTG CCACCGTGCGGAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAAGTGAATATCGTGAAAAAGACCGAG GTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCAGCAAAGAGTCTATCCTGCCCAAGAGGAACAGCGATAA GCTGATCGCCAGAAAGAAGGACTGGGACCCTAAGAAGTACGGCGGCTTCGACAGCC CCACCGTGGCCTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGCCAAAGTGGAAAAGGGCAAGTCCAAG AAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAAGAGCTGCTGGGGATCACCATCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTT CGAGAAGAATCCCATCGACTTTCTGGAAGCCAAGGGCTACAAAGAAGTGAAAAAGG ACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCTAAGTACTCCCTGTTCGAGCTGGAAAACGGCCGGAAG AGAATGCTGGCCTCTGCCGGCGAACTGCAGAAGGGAAACGAACTGGCCCTGCCCTC CAAATATGTGAACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGCCACTATGAGAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCC CGAGGATAATGAGCAGAAACAGCTGTTTGTGGAACAGCACAAGCACTACCTGGACG AGATCATCGAGCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAGAGAGTGATCCTGGCCGACGCTAAT CTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGCCTACAACAAGCACCGGGATAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCA GGCCGAGAATATCATCCACCTGTTTACCCTGACCAATCTGGGAGCCCCTGCCGCCTT CAAGTACTTTGACACCACCATCGACCGGAAGAGGTACACCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGC TGGACGCCACCCTGATCCACCAGAGCATCACCGGCCTGTACGAGACACGGATCGAC CTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCGACAGCCCCAAGAAGAAGAGAAAGGTGGAGGCCAGCT AACATATGATTCGAATGTCTTTCTTGCGCTATGACACTTCCAGCAAAAGGTAGGGCG GGCTGCGAGACGGCTTCCCGGCGCTGCATGCAACACCGATGATGCTTCGACCCCCCG AAGCTCCTTCGGGGCTGCATGGGCGCTCCGATGCCGCTCCAGGGCGAGCGCTGTTTA AATAGCCAGGCCCCCGATTGCAAAGACATTATAGCGAGCTACCAAAGCCATATTCA AACACCTAGATCACTACCACTTCTACACAGGCCACTCGAGCTTGTGATCGCACTCCG CTAAGGGGGCGCCTCTTCCTCTTCGTTTCAGTCACAACCCGCAAACATGACACAAGA ATCCCTGTTACTTCTCGACCGTATTGATTCGGATGATTCCTACGCGAGCCTGCGGAA CGACCAGGAATTCTGGGAGGTGAGTCGACGAGCAAGCCCGGCGGATCAGGCAGCGT GCTTGCAGATTTGACTTGCAACGCCCGCATTGTGTCGACGAAGGCTTTTGGCTCCTCT GTCGCTGTCTCAAGCAGCATCTAACCCTGCGTCGCCGTTTCCATTTGCAGCCGCTGG CCCGCCGAGCCCTGGAGGAGCTCGGGCTGCCGGTGCCGCCGGTGCTGCGGGTGCCC GGCGAGAGCACCAACCCCGTACTGGTCGGCGAGCCCGGCCCGGTGATCAAGCTGTT CGGCGAGCACTGGTGCGGTCCGGAGAGCCTCGCGTCGGAGTCGGAGGCGTACGCGG TCCTGGCGGACGCCCCGGTGCCGGTGCCCCGCCTCCTCGGCCGCGGCGAGCTGCGGC CCGGCACCGGAGCCTGGCCGTGGCCCTACCTGGTGATGAGCCGGATGACCGGCACC ACCTGGCGGTCCGCGATGGACGGCACGACCGACCGGAACGCGCTGCTCGCCCTGGC CCGCGAACTCGGCCGGGTGCTCGGCCGGCTGCACAGGGTGCCGCTGACCGGGAACA CCGTGCTCACCCCCCATTCCGAGGTCTTCCCGGAACTGCTGCGGGAACGCCGCGCGG CGACCGTCGAGGACCACCGCGGGTGGGGCTACCTCTCGCCCCGGCTGCTGGACCGC CTGGAGGACTGGCTGCCGGACGTGGACACGCTGCTGGCCGGCCGCGAACCCCGGTT CGTCCACGGCGACCTGCACGGGACCAACATCTTCGTGGACCTGGCCGCGACCGAGG TCACCGGGATCGTCGACTTCACCGACGTCTATGCGGGAGACTCCCGCTACAGCCTGG TGCAACTGCATCTCAACGCCTTCCGGGGCGACCGCGAGATCCTGGCCGCGCTGCTCG ACGGGGCGCAGTGGAAGCGGACCGAGGACTTCGCCCGCGAACTGCTCGCCTTCACC TTCCTGCACGACTTCGAGGTGTTCGAGGAGACCCCGCTGGATCTCTCCGGCTTCACC GATCCGGAGGAACTGGCGCAGTTCCTCTGGGGGCCGCCGGACACCGCCCCCGGCGC CTGATAAGGATCCGGCAAGACTGGCCCCGCTTGGCAACGCAACAGTGAGCCCCTCC CTAGTGTGTTTGGGGATGTGACTATGTATTCGTGTGTTGGCCAACGGGTCAACCCGA ACAGATTGATACCCGCCTTGGCATTTCCTGTCAGAATGTAACGTCAGTTGATGGTAC T.

For all modified Chlamydomonas reinhardtii cells, Applicants use PCR, SURVEYOR nuclease assay, and DNA sequencing to verify successful modification.

Example 8: Crystal Structure

FIGS. 23A-M provide: various views of the CRISPR-cas complex crystal structure (A-I), chemieric RNA architecture from the crystal structure (J-K), an interaction schematic from the crystal structure (L) and a topology schematic from the crystal structure (M).

FIGS. 23J-K concern a SpCas9 sgRNA structural study, and FIGS. 26A-B also pertain to sgRNA mutations. SpCas9 sgRNAs were mutated to investigate contribution of specific bases or groups of bases to activity. These include mutations in the direct repeat (DR) and tracrRNA regions of the sgRNA, divided into: stem 1 (base-pairing region between DR and tracrRNA), bulge (un-paired bases between DR and tracrRNA), loop 1 (artificial GAAA connector between DR and tracrRNA), linker 1 (between stem 1 and stem 2), stem 2 (first hairpin formed by tracrRNA tail), loop 2 (loop in between stem 2), stem 3 (second, or last hairpin formed by tracrRNA tail), and loop 3 (loop in between stem 3). Mutations were chosen based on predicted secondary structure as well as secondary structure as illustrated in FIGS. 23A-M, especially FIG. 23J. In addition, three (3) sgRNA scaffolds were designed to incorporate MS2 loops in loop regions for interaction/binding to recruit functional domains fused to MBP. sgRNAs were synthesized as U6::PCR amplicon and tested in co-transfection with wildtype SpCas9.

400 ng of Cas9 plasmid, 100 ng of sgRNA into 200,000 HEK 293FT cells with Lipofectamine 2000; DNA was harvested 3 days post-transfection for SURVEYOR analysis.

The invention thus comprehends the invention comprehends a CRISPR-cas9 (S. pyogenes) system having a crystal having the structure defined by the co-ordinates of following Crystal Structure Table (the CRISPR-cas9 crystal structure) (SEQ ID NOS 51-73, respectively, in order of appearance).

Lengthy table referenced here US20240035007A1-20240201-T00001 Please refer to the end of the specification for access instructions.

Example 9: S. pyogenes (Sp) SpCas9 Truncations from Crystal Structure

FIGS. 25A-B pertain to SpCas9 truncations from full length SpCas9. These figures show Surveyor gel test results of SpCas9 truncation mutants from the crystal structure that retain cleavage activity (A) and a table showing the amino acid truncations and flexible (GGGS) (SEQ ID NO: 1) or rigid (A(EAAAK)) (SEQ ID NO: 7) linker substitutions of the lanes of the gels of FIG. 25A (B)

In this Example, SpCas9 sequences were analyzed by 1. Comparing against orthologs (S. aureus, S. thermophilus CRISPRI, S. thermophilus CRISPR3, and N. meningiditis), including smaller Cas9s (S. aureus, S. thermophilus CRISPRI, and N. meningiditis) for regions that are conserved or variable, and 2. Boundaries identified by crystallography as being potentially non-critical for contacting target DNA:sgRNA duplex. A region of SpCas9 (helical domain 2) was not present in many smaller Cas9 orthologs, and predicted to be dispensable for function. Two similar sets of truncations were made, one by sequence alignment with smaller Cas9s, one by crystal prediction. In addition, several sets of flexible glycine-serine (GlyGlyGlySer) (SEQ ID NO: 1) or rigid alpha-helical linkers (Ala(GluAlaAlaAlaLys)Ala) (SEQ ID NO: 2) in groups of 3, 6, 9, or 12 repeats (SEQ ID NOS 3-6, respectively) were also used to replace helical domain 2 for potential structural stabilization and/or aiding of retaining SpCas9:sgRNA specificity. All of the helical region 2 truncations and linker substitutions retained SpCas9 activity. SpCas9 was truncated systematically in Helical 1, 2, and 3 domains, as well as the C′-terminal putative PAM-recognizing domain. Truncation mutants were transfected into HEK 293FT cells as follows: 400 ng of truncation Cas9 plasmid and 100 ng of sgRNA co-transfected into 200,000 cells by Lipofectamine 2000. DNAs from cells were harvested for SURVEYOR analysis.

Below: full length SpCas9 DNA sequence and sequences of the subdomains; followed by helical domain 2 truncation and variants.

>Full length NLS-SpCas9-NLS (SEQ ID NO: 74) ATGGCCCCAAAGAAGAAGCGGAAGGTCGGTATCCACGGAGTCCCAGCAG CCGACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGACATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGCTGGGCC GTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCAACAC CGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACAGCGGCG AAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACACCAGACG GAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAGGTGG ACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGATAAGAAG CACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACGAGAA GTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAAGGCCG ACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCACTTCC TGATCGAGGGCGACCTGAACCCCGACAACAGCGACGTGGACAAGCTGTTCATCCAG CTGGTGCAGACCTACAACCAGCTGTTCGAGGAAAACCCCATCAACGCCAGCGGCGT GGACGCCAAGGCCATCCTGTCTGCCAGACTGAGCAAGAGCAGACGGCTGGAAAATC TGATCGCCCAGCTGCCCGGCGAGAAGAAGAATGGCCTGTTCGGAAACCTGATTGCC CTGAGCCTGGGCCTGACCCCCAACTTCAAGAGCAACTTCGACCTGGCCGAGGATGC CAAACTGCAGCTGAGCAAGGACACCTACGACGACGACCTGGACAACCTGCTGGCCC AGATCGGCGACCAGTACGCCGACCTGTTTCTGGCCGCCAAGAACCTGTCCGACGCC ATCCTGCTGAGCGACATCCTGAGAGTGAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCCCTGAG CGCCTCTATGATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCTGAAAG CTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAGAGCA AGAACGGCTACGCCGGCTACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTACAAG TTCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGTGAAGCT GAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATCCCCC ACCAGATCCACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATTTTTAC CCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCATCCC CTACTACGTGGGCCCTCTGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACCAGAA AGAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAAGGGCGCT TCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGATGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCAACGA GAAGGTGCTGCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTATAACGAGCT GACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAATGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCG AGCAGAAAAAGGCCATCGTGGACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTG AAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCTTCGACTCCGTGGAAAT CTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCAACGCCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAA AATTATCAAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGACATTCTGGAAG ATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGAGGACAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTG AAAACCTATGCCCACCTGTTCGACGACAAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGAG ATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGCTGATCAACGGCATCCGGGACAAGC AGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGATTTCCTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAAC TTCATGCAGCTGATCCACGACGACAGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAGAAAGC CCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCTGCACGAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCA GCCCCGCCATTAAGAAGGGCATCCTGCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGTG AAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCCGAGAACATCGTGATCGAAATGGCCAGAGAGA ACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAGAAGAACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGA AGAGGGCATCAAAGAGCTGGGCAGCCAGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGTGGAAAAC ACCCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAAGCTGTACCTGTACTACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGGATAT GTACGTGGACCAGGAACTGGACATCAACCGGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACCATA TCGTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAAGGACGACTCCATCGACAACAAGGTGCTGACCAGA AGCGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAGAGCGACAACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGA AGATGAAGAACTACTGGCGGCAGCTGCTGAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGAGAAAG TTCGACAATCTGACCAAGGCCGAGAGAGGCGGCCTGAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGG CTTCATCAAGAGACAGCTGGTGGAAACCCGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGA TCCTGGACTCCCGGATGAACACTAAGTACGACGAGAATGACAAGCTGATCCGGGAA GTGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCAAGCTGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAG TTTTACAAAGTGCGCGAGATCAACAACTACCACCACGCCCACGACGCCTACCTGAA CGCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATCAAAAAGTACCCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCG TGTACGGCGACTACAAGGTGTACGACGTGCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAG GAAATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCCAAGTACTTCTTCTACAGCAACATCATGAACTTTTTC AAGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCAACGGCGAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGAC AAACGGCGAAACCGGGGAGATCGTGTGGGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGTGC GGAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAAGTGAATATCGTGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACA GGCGGCTTCAGCAAAGAGTCTATCCTGCCCAAGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGC CAGAAAGAAGGACTGGGACCCTAAGAAGTACGGCGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGTGG CCTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGCCAAAGTGGAAAAGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAG AGTGTGAAAGAGCTGCTGGGGATCACCATCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAA TCCCATCGACTTTCTGGAAGCCAAGGGCTACAAAGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCA TCAAGCTGCCTAAGTACTCCCTGTTCGAGCTGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTG GCCTCTGCCGGCGAACTGCAGAAGGGAAACGAACTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGT GAACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGCCACTATGAGAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATA ATGAGCAGAAACAGCTGTTTGTGGAACAGCACAAGCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATC GAGCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAGAGAGTGATCCTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAA AGTGCTGTCCGCCTACAACAAGCACCGGGATAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGA ATATCATCCACCTGTTTACCCTGACCAATCTGGGAGCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTT TGACACCACCATCGACCGGAAGAGGTACACCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCA CCCTGATCCACCAGAGCATCACCGGCCTGTACGAGACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGC TGGGAGGCGACAAAAGGCCGGCGGCCACGAAAAAGGCCGGCCAGGCAAAAAAGAA AAAGtaa >N′-terminal NLS (SEQ ID NO: 75) ATGGCCCCAAAGAAGAAGCGGAAGGTCGGTATCCACGGAGTCCCAGCAG CC >RuvCI domain (SEQ ID NO: 76) GACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGACATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGCTG GGCCGTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCA ACACCGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACAGC GGCGAAACA >Bridging helix (SEQ ID NO: 77) GCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACACCAGAC GGAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTC >Helical domain 1 (SEQ ID NO: 78) AGCAACGAGATGGCCAAGGTGGACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAG AGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGATAAGAAGCACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAAC ATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACGAGAAGTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAA GAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAAGGCCGACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGG CCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCACTTCCTGATCGAGGGCGAC >Helical domain 2 (dispensable) (SEQ ID NO: 79) CTGAACCCCGACAACAGCGACGTGGACAAGCTGTTCATCCAGCTGGTGCA GACCTACAACCAGCTGTTCGAGGAAAACCCCATCAACGCCAGCGGCGTGGACGCCA AGGCCATCCTGTCTGCCAGACTGAGCAAGAGCAGACGGCTGGAAAATCTGATCGCC CAGCTGCCCGGCGAGAAGAAGAATGGCCTGTTCGGAAACCTGATTGCCCTGAGCCT GGGCCTGACCCCCAACTTCAAGAGCAACTTCGACCTGGCCGAGGATGCCAAACTGC AGCTGAGCAAGGACACCTACGACGACGACCTGGACAACCTGCTGGCCCAGATCGGC GACCAGTACGCCGACCTGTTTCTGGCCGCCAAGAACCTGTCCGACGCCATCCTGCTG AGCGACATCCTGAGAGTGAACACCGAG >Helical domain 3 (SEQ ID NO: 80) ATCACCAAGGCCCCCCTGAGCGCCTCTATGATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCA CCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCTGAAAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGT ACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAGAGCAAGAACGGCTACGCCGGCTACATTGACGGC GGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTACAAGTTCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGA CGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGTGAAGCTGAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAAGCAGC GGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATCCCCCACCAGATCCACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCC ATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATTTTTACCCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGAT CGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCATCCCCTACTACGTGGGCCCTCTGGCCAGGGGAAA CAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACCAGAAAGAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACT TCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAAGGGCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGATGACC AACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCAACGAGAAGGTGCTGCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTA CGAGTACTTCACCGTGTATAACGAGCTGACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAA TGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCGAGCAGAAAAAGGCCATCGTGGACCTGCTG TTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTGAAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAA AATCGAGTGCTTCGACTCCGTGGAAATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCAACGCCTC CCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAAAATTATCAAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGACA ATGAGGAAAACGAGGACATTCTGGAAGATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGAG GACAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTGAAAACCTATGCCCACCTGTTCGACGACAA AGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGAGATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGG AAGCTGATCAACGGCATCCGGGACAAGCAGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGATTTCCT GAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAACTTCATGCAGCTGATCCACGACGACAGCC TGACCTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAGAAAGCC >Flexible linker (SEQ ID NO: 81) CAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGAT >RuvC II (SEQ ID NO: 82) ATCGTGATCGAAATGGCCAGAGAG >HNH (SEQ ID NO: 83) GACTACGATGTGGACCATATCGTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAAGGACGACTC CATCGACAACAAGGTGCTGACCAGAAGCGACAAGAAC >RuvCIII (SEQ ID NO: 84) CACCACGCCCACGACGCCTACCTG >C-terminal (PAM recognizing domain) (SEQ ID NO: 85) ACCGAGGTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCAGCAAAGAGTCTATCCTGCCCAAGA GGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCCAGAAAGAAGGACTGGGACCCTAAGAAGTACGG CGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGTGGCCTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGCCAAAGTGGAAAA GGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAAGAGCTGCTGGGGATCACCATCATGG AAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAATCCCATCGACTTTCTGGAAGCCAAGGGCTACAAA GAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCTAAGTACTCCCTGTTCGAGCTGGA AAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGGCCTCTGCCGGCGAACTGCAGAAGGGAAACGAA CTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTGAACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGCCACTATGAGAAG CTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAGAAACAGCTGTTTGTGGAACAGCACAA GCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCGAGCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAGAGAGTGATCC TGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGCCTACAACAAGCACCGGGATAAG CCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAATATCATCCACCTGTTTACCCTGACCAATCTGGGA GCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACCATCGACCGGAAGAGGTACACCAGC ACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGATCCACCAGAGCATCACCGGCCTGTACGA GACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCGAC C′-NLS (SEQ ID NO: 86) AAAAGGCCGGCGGCCACGAAAAAGGCCGGCCAGGCAAAAAAGAAAAAG 6. Sp_Δ_hel 2(174-311) helical domain 2 deletion (from ortholog alignment) (SEQ ID NO: 87) ATGGCCCCAAAGAAGAAGCGGAAGGTCGGTATCCACGGAGTCCCAGCAG CCGACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGACATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGCTGGGCC GTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCAACAC CGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACAGCGGCG AAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACACCAGACG GAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAGGTGG ACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGATAAGAAG CACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACGAGAA GTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAAGGCCG ACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCACTTCC TGATCGAGGGCGACATCACCAAGGCaCCaCTGAGCGCCTCTATGATCAAGAGATACG ACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCTGAAAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCT GAGAAGTACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAGAGCAAGAACGGCTACGCCGGCTACAT TGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTACAAGTTCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAA AGATGGACGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGTGAAGCTGAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGG AAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATCCCCCACCAGATCCACCTGGGAGAGCT GCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATTTTTACCCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGG AAAAGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCATCCCCTACTACGTGGGCCCTCTGGCCA GGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACCAGAAAGAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCC CTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAAGGGCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGC GGATGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCAACGAGAAGGTGCTGCCCAAGCACAGC CTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTATAACGAGCTGACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACC GAGGGAATGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCGAGCAGAAAAAGGCCATCGTGG ACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTGAAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTAC TTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCTTCGACTCCGTGGAAATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTC AACGCCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAAAATTATCAAGGACAAGGACTT CCTGGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGACATTCTGGAAGATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACAC TGTTTGAGGACAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTGAAAACCTATGCCCACCTGTTC GACGACAAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGAGATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGC TGAGCCGGAAGCTGATCAACGGCATCCGGGACAAGCAGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTG GATTTCCTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAACTTCATGCAGCTGATCCACGAC GACAGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAGAAAGCCCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGA TAGCCTGCACGAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCAGCCCCGCCATTAAGAAGGGCA TCCTGCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGTGAAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAG CCCGAGAACATCGTGATCGAAATGGCCAGAGAGAACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGAC AGAAGAACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGAAGAGGGCATCAAAGAGCTGGG CAGCCAGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGTGGAAAACACCCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAAG CTGTACCTGTACTACCTGCAGAATGGGGGGATATGTACGTGGACCAGGAACTGGA CATCAACCGGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACCATATCGTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAA GGACGACTCCATCGACAACAAGGTGCTGACCAGAAGCGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAG AGCGACAACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGAAGATGAAGAACTACTGGCGGCA GCTGCTGAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGAGAAAGTTCGACAATCTGACCAAGGCCG AGAGAGGCGGCCTGAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGCTTCATCAAGAGACAGCTGGTG GAAACCCGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGATCCTGGACTCCCGGATGAACAC TAAGTACGACGAGAATGACAAGCTGATCCGGGAAGTGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGT CCAAGCTGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGTTTTACAAAGTGCGCGAGATCA ACAACTACCACCACGCCCACGACGCCTACCTGAACGCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTG ATCAAAAAGTACCCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGACTACAAGGTGTA CGACGTGCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGGAAATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCC AAGTACTTCTTCTACAGCAACATCATGAACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCC AACGGCGAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAAACGGCGAAACCGGGGAGA TCGTGTGGGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGTGCGGAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCC CAAGTGAATATCGTGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCAGCAAAGAGTC TATCCTGCCCAAGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCCAGAAAGAAGGACTGGGACC CTAAGAAGTACGGCGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGTGGCCTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGG CCAAAGTGGAAAAGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAAGAGCTGCTGGG GATCACCATCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAATCCCATCGACTTTCTGGAAG CCAAGGGCTACAAAGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCTAAGTACTCC CTGTTCGAGCTGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGGCCTCTGCCGGCGAACTGCA GAAGGGAAACGAACTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTGAACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCA GCCACTATGAGAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAGAAACAGCTGTTT GTGGAACAGCACAAGCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCGAGCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTC CAAGAGAGTGATCCTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGCCTACAACA AGCACCGGGATAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAATATCATCCACCTGTTTACC CTGACCAATCTGGGAGCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACCATCGACCGG AAGAGGTACACCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGATCCACCAGAGCAT CACCGGCCTGTACGAGACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCGACAAAAGGC CGGCGGCCACGAAAAAGGCCGGCCAGGCAAAAAAGAAAAAGtaa 7. Sp_Δ_hel 2-(GGGGS)3 helical domain 2 deletion (from ortholog alignment) (“(GGGGS)3” disclosed as SEQ ID NO: 9) (SEQ ID NO: 88) ATGGCCCCAAAGAAGAAGCGGAAGGTCGGTATCCACGGAGTCCCAGCAG CCGACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGACATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGCTGGGCC GTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCAACAC CGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACAGCGGCG AAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACACCAGACG GAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAGGTGG ACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGATAAGAAG CACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACGAGAA GTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAAGGCCG ACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCACTTCC TGATCGAGGGCGACGGTGGCGGTGGCtcgGGTGGCGGTGGCtcgGGTGGCGGTGGCtcg ATCACCAAGGCCCCCCTGAGCGCCTCTATGATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCACCACCA GGACCTGACCCTGCTGAAAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAAAG AGATTTTCTTCGACCAGAGCAAGAACGGCTACGCCGGCTACATTGACGGCGGAGCC AGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTACAAGTTCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCAC CGAGGAACTGCTCGTGAAGCTGAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAAGCAGCGGACCT TCGACAACGGCAGCATCCCCCACCAGATCCACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTG CGGCGGCAGGAAGATTTTTACCCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGAGAA GATCCTGACCTTCCGCATCCCCTACTACGTGGGCCCTCTGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAG ATTCGCCTGGATGACCAGAAAGAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGG AAGTGGTGGACAAGGGCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGATGACCAACTTC GATAAGAACCTGCCCAACGAGAAGGTGCTGCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTA CTTCACCGTGTATAACGAGCTGACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAATGAGAA AGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCGAGCAGAAAAAGGCCATCGTGGACCTGCTGTTCAAG ACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTGAAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGA GTGCTTCGACTCCGTGGAAATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCAACGCCTCCCTGGG CACATACCACGATCTGCTGAAAATTATCAAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGACAATGAGG AAAACGAGGACATTCTGGAAGATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGAGGACAGA GAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTGAAAACCTATGCCCACCTGTTCGACGACAAAGTGAT GAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGAGATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGCTG ATCAACGGCATCCGGGACAAGCAGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGATTTCCTGAAGTC CGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAACTTCATGCAGCTGATCCACGACGACAGCCTGACCTT TAAAGAGGACATCCAGAAAGCCCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCTGCACGAGC ACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCAGCCCCGCCATTAAGAAGGGCATCCTGCAGACAGTG AAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGTGAAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCCGAGAACATCGT GATCGAAATGGCCAGAGAGAACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAGAAGAACAGCCGC GAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGAAGAGGGCATCAAAGAGCTGGGCAGCCAGATCCTGA AAGAACACCCCGTGGAAAACACCCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAAGCTGTACCTGTACTAC CTGCAGAATGGGCGGGATATGTACGTGGACCAGGAACTGGACATCAACCGGCTGTC CGACTACGATGTGGACCATATCGTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAAGGACGACTCCATCGA CAACAAGGTGCTGACCAGAAGCGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAGAGCGACAACGTGCCC TCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGAAGATGAAGAACTACTGGCGGCAGCTGCTGAACGCCAA GCTGATTACCCAGAGAAAGTTCGACAATCTGACCAAGGCCGAGAGAGGCGGCCTGA GCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGCTTCATCAAGAGACAGCTGGTGGAAACCCGGCAGATC ACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGATCCTGGACTCCCGGATGAACACTAAGTACGACGAGAA TGACAAGCTGATCCGGGAAGTGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCAAGCTGGTGTCCG ATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGTTTTACAAAGTGCGCGAGATCAACAACTACCACCACG CCCACGACGCCTACCTGAACGCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATCAAAAAGTACCCT AAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGACTACAAGGTGTACGACGTGCGGAAGAT GATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGGAAATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCCAAGTACTTCTTCTACA GCAACATCATGAACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCAACGGCGAGATCCGG AAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAAACGGCGAAACCGGGGAGATCGTGTGGGATAAGG GCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGTGCGGAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAAGTGAATATCGTG AAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCAGCAAAGAGTCTATCCTGCCCAAGAG GAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCCAGAAAGAAGGACTGGGACCCTAAGAAGTACGGC GGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGTGGCCTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGCCAAAGTGGAAAAG GGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAAGAGCTGCTGGGGATCACCATCATGGA AAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAATCCCATCGACTTTCTGGAAGCCAAGGGCTACAAAG AAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCTAAGTACTCCCTGTTCGAGCTGGAA AACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGGCCTCTGCCGGCGAACTGCAGAAGGGAAACGAAC TGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTGAACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGCCACTATGAGAAGC TGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAGAAACAGCTGTTTGTGGAACAGCACAAG CACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCGAGCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAGAGAGTGATCCT GGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGCCTACAACAAGCACCGGGATAAGC CCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAATATCATCCACCTGTTTACCCTGACCAATCTGGGA GCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACCATCGACCGGAAGAGGTACACCAGC ACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGATCCACCAGAGCATCACCGGCCTGTACGA GACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCGACAAAAGGCCGGCGGCCACGAAA AAGGCCGGCCAGGCAAAAAAGAAAAAGtaa 8. Sp_Δ_hel 2-(GGGGS)6 helical domain 2 deletion (from ortholog alignment) (“(GGGGS)6” disclosed as SEQ ID NO: 10) (SEQ ID NO: 89) ATGGCCCCAAAGAAGAAGCGGAAGGTCGGTATCCACGGAGTCCCAGCAG CCGACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGACATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGCTGGGCC GTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCAACAC CGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACAGCGGCG AAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACACCAGACG GAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAGGTGG ACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGATAAGAAG CACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACGAGAA GTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAAGGCCG ACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCACTTCC TGATCGAGGGCGACGGTGGCGGTGGCtcgGGTGGCGGTGGCtcgGGTGGCGGTGGCtcg GGTGGCGGTGGCtcgGGTGGCGGTGGCtcgGGTGGCGGTGGCtcgATCACCAAGGCCCCC CTGAGCGCCTCTATGATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCT GAAAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACC AGAGCAAGAACGGCTACGCCGGCTACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTC TACAAGTTCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGT GAAGCTGAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGC ATCCCCCACCAGATCCACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGA TTTTTACCCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCG CATCCCCTACTACGTGGGCCCTCTGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGA CCAGAAAGAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAA GGGCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGATGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGC CCAACGAGAAGGTGCTGCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTAT AACGAGCTGACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAATGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCT GAGCGGCGAGCAGAAAAAGGCCATCGTGGACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAA GTGACCGTGAAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCTTCGACTC CGTGGAAATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCAACGCCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACG ATCTGCTGAAAATTATCAAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGAC ATTCTGGAAGATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGAGGACAGAGAGATGATCGA GGAACGGCTGAAAACCTATGCCCACCTGTTCGACGACAAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGA AGCGGCGGAGATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGCTGATCAACGGCATC CGGGACAAGCAGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGATTTCCTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGC CAACAGAAACTTCATGCAGCTGATCCACGACGACAGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACA TCCAGAAAGCCCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCTGCACGAGCACATTGCCAAT CTGGCCGGCAGCCCCGCCATTAAGAAGGGCATCCTGCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGA CGAGCTCGTGAAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCCGAGAACATCGTGATCGAAATGG CCAGAGAGAACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAGAAGAACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAA GCGGATCGAAGAGGGCATCAAAGAGCTGGGCAGCCAGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCC GTGGAAAACACCCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAAGCTGTACCTGTACTACCTGCAGAATGG GCGGGATATGTACGTGGACCAGGAACTGGACATCAACCGGCTGTCCGACTACGATG TGGACCATATCGTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAAGGACGACTCCATCGACAACAAGGTGC TGACCAGAAGCGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAGAGCGACAACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGT CGTGAAGAAGATGAAGAACTACTGGCGGCAGCTGCTGAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCC AGAGAAAGTTCGACAATCTGACCAAGGCCGAGAGAGGCGGCCTGAGCGAACTGGAT AAGGCCGGCTTCATCAAGAGACAGCTGGTGGAAACCCGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGT GGCACAGATCCTGGACTCCCGGATGAACACTAAGTACGACGAGAATGACAAGCTGA TCCGGGAAGTGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCAAGCTGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAG GATTTCCAGTTTTACAAAGTGCGCGAGATCAACAACTACCACCACGCCCACGACGCC TACCTGAACGCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATCAAAAAGTACCCTAAGCTGGAAAG CGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGACTACAAGGTGTACGACGTGCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGA GCGAGCAGGAAATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCCAAGTACTTCTTCTACAGCAACATCATG AACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCAACGGCGAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCT GATCGAGACAAACGGCGAAACCGGGGAGATCGTGTGGGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTG CCACCGTGCGGAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAAGTGAATATCGTGAAAAAGACCGAG GTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCAGCAAAGAGTCTATCCTGCCCAAGAGGAACAGCGATAA GCTGATCGCCAGAAAGAAGGACTGGGACCCTAAGAAGTACGGCGGCTTCGACAGCC CCACCGTGGCCTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGCCAAAGTGGAAAAGGGCAAGTCCAAG AAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAAGAGCTGCTGGGGATCACCATCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTT CGAGAAGAATCCCATCGACTTTCTGGAAGCCAAGGGCTACAAAGAAGTGAAAAAGG ACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCTAAGTACTCCCTGTTCGAGCTGGAAAACGGCCGGAAG AGAATGCTGGCCTCTGCCGGCGAACTGCAGAAGGGAAACGAACTGGCCCTGCCCTC CAAATATGTGAACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGCCACTATGAGAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCC CGAGGATAATGAGCAGAAACAGCTGTTTGTGGAACAGCACAAGCACTACCTGGACG AGATCATCGAGCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAGAGAGTGATCCTGGCCGACGCTAAT CTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGCCTACAACAAGCACCGGGATAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCA GGCCGAGAATATCATCCACCTGTTTACCCTGACCAATCTGGGAGCCCCTGCCGCCTT CAAGTACTTTGACACCACCATCGACCGGAAGAGGTACACCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGC TGGACGCCACCCTGATCCACCAGAGCATCACCGGCCTGTACGAGACACGGATCGAC CTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCGACAAAAGGCCGGCGGCCACGAAAAAGGCCGGCCAGG CAAAAAAGAAAAAGtaa 9. Sp_Δ_hel 2-(GGGGS)9 helical domain 2 deletion (from ortholog alignment) (“(GGGGS)9” disclosed as SEQ ID NO: 11) (SEQ ID NO: 90) ATGGCCCCAAAGAAGAAGCGGAAGGTCGGTATCCACGGAGTCCCAGCAG CCGACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGACATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGCTGGGCC GTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCAACAC CGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACAGCGGCG AAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACACCAGACG GAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAGGTGG ACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGATAAGAAG CACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACGAGAA GTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAAGGCCG ACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCACTTCC TGATCGAGGGCGACGGTGGCGGTGGCtcgGGTGGCGGTGGCtcgGGTGGCGGTGGCtcg GGTGGCGGTGGCtcgGGTGGCGGTGGCtcgGGTGGCGGTGGCtcgGGTGGCGGTGGCtcgG GTGGCGGTGGCtcgGGTGGCGGTGGCtcgATCACCAAGGCCCCCCTGAGCGCCTCTATG ATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCTGAAAGCTCTCGTGCG GCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAGAGCAAGAACGGCT ACGCCGGCTACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTACAAGTTCATCAAG CCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGTGAAGCTGAACAGAGA GGACCTGCTGCGGAAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATCCCCCACCAGATCC ACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATTTTTACCCATTCCTGA AGGACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCATCCCCTACTACGTG GGCCCTCTGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACCAGAAAGAGCGAGG AAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAAGGGCGCTTCCGCCCAG AGCTTCATCGAGCGGATGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCAACGAGAAGGTGCT GCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTATAACGAGCTGACCAAAG TGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAATGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCGAGCAGAAA AAGGCCATCGTGGACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTGAAGCAGCT GAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCTTCGACTCCGTGGAAATCTCCGGCG TGGAAGATCGGTTCAACGCCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAAAATTATCA AGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGACATTCTGGAAGATATCGTG CTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGAGGACAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTGAAAACCTA TGCCCACCTGTTCGACGACAAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGAGATACACCG GCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGCTGATCAACGGCATCCGGGACAAGCAGTCCGGC AAGACAATCCTGGATTTCCTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAACTTCATGCAG CTGATCCACGACGACAGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAGAAAGCCCAGGTGTC CGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCTGCACGAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCAGCCCCGCCA TTAAGAAGGGCATCCTGCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGTGAAAGTGATG GGCCGGCACAAGCCCGAGAACATCGTGATCGAAATGGCCAGAGAGAACCAGACCA CCCAGAAGGGACAGAAGAACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGAAGAGGGCAT CAAAGAGCTGGGCAGCCAGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGTGGAAAACACCCAGCTGC AGAACGAGAAGCTGTACCTGTACTACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGGATATGTACGTGGAC CAGGAACTGGACATCAACCGGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACCATATCGTGCCTCA GAGCTTTCTGAAGGACGACTCCATCGACAACAAGGTGCTGACCAGAAGCGACAAGA ACCGGGGCAAGAGCGACAACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGAAGATGAAGAA CTACTGGCGGCAGCTGCTGAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGAGAAAGTTCGACAATC TGACCAAGGCCGAGAGAGGCGGCCTGAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGCTTCATCAAG AGACAGCTGGTGGAAACCCGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGATCCTGGACTC CCGGATGAACACTAAGTACGACGAGAATGACAAGCTGATCCGGGAAGTGAAAGTGA TCACCCTGAAGTCCAAGCTGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGTTTTACAAAG TGCGCGAGATCAACAACTACCACCACGCCCACGACGCCTACCTGAACGCCGTCGTG GGAACCGCCCTGATCAAAAAGTACCCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGA CTACAAGGTGTACGACGTGCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGGAAATCGGCA AGGCTACCGCCAAGTACTTCTTCTACAGCAACATCATGAACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGA TTACCCTGGCCAACGGCGAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAAACGGCGAA ACCGGGGAGATCGTGTGGGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGTGCGGAAAGTGCT GAGCATGCCCCAAGTGAATATCGTGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCA GCAAAGAGTCTATCCTGCCCAAGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCCAGAAAGAAG GACTGGGACCCTAAGAAGTACGGCGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGTGGCCTATTCTGTG CTGGTGGTGGCCAAAGTGGAAAAGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAAG AGCTGCTGGGGATCACCATCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAATCCCATCGAC TTTCTGGAAGCCAAGGGCTACAAAGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCC TAAGTACTCCCTGTTCGAGCTGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGGCCTCTGCCG GCGAACTGCAGAAGGGAAACGAACTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTGAACTTCCTG TACCTGGCCAGCCACTATGAGAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAGAA ACAGCTGTTTGTGGAACAGCACAAGCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCGAGCAGATCA GCGAGTTCTCCAAGAGAGTGATCCTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCG CCTACAACAAGCACCGGGATAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAATATCATCCAC CTGTTTACCCTGACCAATCTGGGAGCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACC ATCGACCGGAAGAGGTACACCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGATCCA CCAGAGCATCACCGGCCTGTACGAGACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCG ACAAAAGGCCGGCGGCCACGAAAAAGGCCGGCCAGGCAAAAAAGAAAAAGtaa 10. Sp_Δ_hel 2-(GGGGS)12 helical domain 2 deletion (from ortholog alignment) (“(GGGGS)12” disclosed as SEQ ID NO: 12) (SEQ ID NO: 91) ATGGCCCCAAAGAAGAAGCGGAAGGTCGGTATCCACGGAGTCCCAGCAG CCGACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGACATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGCTGGGCC GTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCAACAC CGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACAGCGGCG AAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACACCAGACG GAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAGGTGG ACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGATAAGAAG CACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACGAGAA GTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAAGGCCG ACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCACTTCC TGATCGAGGGCGACGGTGGCGGTGGCtcgGGTGGCGGTGGCtcgGGTGGCGGTGGCtcg GGTGGCGGTGGCtcgGGTGGCGGTGGCtcgGGTGGCGGTGGCtcgGGTGGCGGTGGCtcgG GTGGCGGTGGCtcgGGTGGCGGTGGCtcgGGTGGCGGTGGCtcgGGTGGCGGTGGCtcgGG TGGCGGTGGCtcgATCACCAAGGCCCCCCTGAGCGCCTCTATGATCAAGAGATACGAC GAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCTGAAAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGA GAAGTACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAGAGCAAGAACGGCTACGCCGGCTACATTG ACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTACAAGTTCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAG ATGGACGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGTGAAGCTGAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAA GCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATCCCCCACCAGATCCACCTGGGAGAGCTGC ACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATTTTTACCCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAA AAGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCATCCCCTACTACGTGGGCCCTCTGGCCAGG GGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACCAGAAAGAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTG GAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAAGGGCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGA TGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCAACGAGAAGGTGCTGCCCAAGCACAGCCTG CTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTATAACGAGCTGACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGA GGGAATGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCGAGCAGAAAAAGGCCATCGTGGACC TGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTGAAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTTC AAGAAAATCGAGTGCTTCGACTCCGTGGAAATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCAA CGCCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAAAATTATCAAGGACAAGGACTTCCT GGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGACATTCTGGAAGATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGT TTGAGGACAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTGAAAACCTATGCCCACCTGTTCGAC GACAAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGAGATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGA GCCGGAAGCTGATCAACGGCATCCGGGACAAGCAGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGAT TTCCTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAACTTCATGCAGCTGATCCACGACGAC AGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAGAAAGCCCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAG CCTGCACGAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCAGCCCCGCCATTAAGAAGGGCATCC TGCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGTGAAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCC GAGAACATCGTGATCGAAATGGCCAGAGAGAACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAGA AGAACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGAAGAGGGCATCAAAGAGCTGGGCAG CCAGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGTGGAAAACACCCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAAGCTGT ACCTGTACTACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGGATATGTACGTGGACCAGGAACTGGACATC AACCGGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACCATATCGTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAAGGAC GACTCCATCGACAACAAGGTGCTGACCAGAAGCGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAGAGCG ACAACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGAAGATGAAGAACTACTGGCGGCAGCTG CTGAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGAGAAAGTTCGACAATCTGACCAAGGCCGAGAG AGGCGGCCTGAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGCTTCATCAAGAGACAGCTGGTGGAAA CCCGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGATCCTGGACTCCCGGATGAACACTAAG TACGACGAGAATGACAAGCTGATCCGGGAAGTGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCAA GCTGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGTTTTACAAAGTGCGCGAGATCAACAA CTACCACCACGCCCACGACGCCTACCTGAACGCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATCA AAAAGTACCCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGACTACAAGGTGTACGAC GTGCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGGAAATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCCAAGT ACTTCTTCTACAGCAACATCATGAACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCAACG GCGAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAAACGGCGAAACCGGGGAGATCGT GTGGGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGTGCGGAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAAG TGAATATCGTGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCAGCAAAGAGTCTATC CTGCCCAAGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCCAGAAAGAAGGACTGGGACCCTA AGAAGTACGGCGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGTGGCCTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGCCA AAGTGGAAAAGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAAGAGCTGCTGGGGAT CACCATCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAATCCCATCGACTTTCTGGAAGCCA AGGGCTACAAAGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCTAAGTACTCCCTG TTCGAGCTGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGGCCTCTGCCGGCGAACTGCAGAA GGGAAACGAACTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTGAACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGCCA CTATGAGAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAGAAACAGCTGTTTGTGG AACAGCACAAGCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCGAGCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAG AGAGTGATCCTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGCCTACAACAAGCA CCGGGATAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAATATCATCCACCTGTTTACCCTGA CCAATCTGGGAGCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACCATCGACCGGAAGA GGTACACCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGATCCACCAGAGCATCACC GGCCTGTACGAGACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCGACAAAAGGCCGGC GGCCACGAAAAAGGCCGGCCAGGCAAAAAAGAAAAAGtaa 11. Sp_Δ_hel 2-A(EAAAK)3A helical domain 2 deletion (from ortholog alignment) (“A(EAAAK)3A” disclosed as SEQ ID NO: 3) (SEQ ID NO: 92) ATGGCCCCAAAGAAGAAGCGGAAGGTCGGTATCCACGGAGTCCCAGCAG CCGACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGACATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGCTGGGCC GTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCAACAC CGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACAGCGGCG AAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACACCAGACG GAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAGGTGG ACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGATAAGAAG CACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACGAGAA GTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAAGGCCG ACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCACTTCC TGATCGAGGGCGACgctGAAGCTGCTGCTAAAGAAGCTGCTGCTAAAGAAGCTGCTG CTAAAgctATCACCAAGGCCCCCCTGAGCGCCTCTATGATCAAGAGATACGACGAGC ACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCTGAAAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAG TACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAGAGCAAGAACGGCTACGCCGGCTACATTGACGG CGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTACAAGTTCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGG ACGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGTGAAGCTGAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAAGCA GCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATCCCCCACCAGATCCACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACG CCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATTTTTACCCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAG ATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCATCCCCTACTACGTGGGCCCTCTGGCCAGGGGA AACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACCAGAAAGAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAA CTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAAGGGCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGATGA CCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCAACGAGAAGGTGCTGCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTG TACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTATAACGAGCTGACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGG AATGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCGAGCAGAAAAAGGCCATCGTGGACCTGC TGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTGAAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAG AAAATCGAGTGCTTCGACTCCGTGGAAATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCAACGCC TCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAAAATTATCAAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGAC AATGAGGAAAACGAGGACATTCTGGAAGATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGA GGACAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTGAAAACCTATGCCCACCTGTTCGACGACA AAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGAGATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCG GAAGCTGATCAACGGCATCCGGGACAAGCAGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGATTTCC TGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAACTTCATGCAGCTGATCCACGACGACAGC CTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAGAAAGCCCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCT GCACGAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCAGCCCCGCCATTAAGAAGGGCATCCTGC AGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGTGAAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCCGA GAACATCGTGATCGAAATGGCCAGAGAGAACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAGAAG AACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGAAGAGGGCATCAAAGAGCTGGGCAGCC AGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGTGGAAAACACCCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAAGCTGTAC CTGTACTACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGGATATGTACGTGGACCAGGAACTGGACATCAA CCGGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACCATATCGTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAAGGACGA CTCCATCGACAACAAGGTGCTGACCAGAAGCGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAGAGCGAC AACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGAAGATGAAGAACTACTGGCGGCAGCTGCT GAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGAGAAAGTTCGACAATCTGACCAAGGCCGAGAGAG GCGGCCTGAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGCTTCATCAAGAGACAGCTGGTGGAAACC CGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGATCCTGGACTCCCGGATGAACACTAAGTA CGACGAGAATGACAAGCTGATCCGGGAAGTGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCAAGC TGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGTTTTACAAAGTGCGCGAGATCAACAACT ACCACCACGCCCACGACGCCTACCTGAACGCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATCAAA AAGTACCCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGACTACAAGGTGTACGACGT GCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGGAAATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCCAAGTAC TTCTTCTACAGCAACATCATGAACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCAACGGC GAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAAACGGCGAAACCGGGGAGATCGTGTG GGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGTGCGGAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAAGTGA ATATCGTGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCAGCAAAGAGTCTATCCTG CCCAAGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCCAGAAAGAAGGACTGGGACCCTAAGA AGTACGGCGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGTGGCCTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGCCAAAG TGGAAAAGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAAGAGCTGCTGGGGATCAC CATCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAATCCCATCGACTTTCTGGAAGCCAAGG GCTACAAAGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCTAAGTACTCCCTGTTC GAGCTGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGGCCTCTGCCGGCGAACTGCAGAAGG GAAACGAACTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTGAACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGCCACT ATGAGAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAGAAACAGCTGTTTGTGGAA CAGCACAAGCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCGAGCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAGAG AGTGATCCTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGCCTACAACAAGCACC GGGATAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAATATCATCCACCTGTTTACCCTGACC AATCTGGGAGCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACCATCGACCGGAAGAG GTACACCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGATCCACCAGAGCATCACCG GCCTGTACGAGACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCGACAAAAGGCCGGCG GCCACGAAAAAGGCCGGCCAGGCAAAAAAGAAAAAGtaa 12. Sp_Δ_hel 2-A(EAAAK)3ALEA(EAAAK)3A helical domain 2 deletion (from ortholog alignment) (“A(EAAAK)3ALEA(EAAAK)3A” disclosed as SEQ ID NO: 93) (SEQ ID NO: 94) ATGGCCCCAAAGAAGAAGCGGAAGGTCGGTATCCACGGAGTCCCAGCAG CCGACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGACATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGCTGGGCC GTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCAACAC CGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACAGCGGCG AAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACACCAGACG GAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAGGTGG ACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGATAAGAAG CACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACGAGAA GTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAAGGCCG ACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCACTTCC TGATCGAGGGCGACgctGAAGCCGCTGCTAAAGAAGCGCTGCTAAAGAAGCcGCTGC TAAAGccCTGGAGgctGAAGCcGCTGCTAAAGAAGCcGCTGCTAAAGAAGCCGCTGCT AAAgctATCACCAAGGCCCCCCTGAGCGCCTCTATGATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCAC CACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCTGAAAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTA CAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAGAGCAAGAACGGCTACGCCGGCTACATTGACGGCG GAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTACAAGTTCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGAC GGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGTGAAGCTGAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAAGCAGC GGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATCCCCCACCAGATCCACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCC ATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATTTTTACCCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGAT CGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCATCCCCTACTACGTGGGCCCTCTGGCCAGGGGAAA CAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACCAGAAAGAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACT TCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAAGGGCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGATGACC AACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCAACGAGAAGGTGCTGCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTA CGAGTACTTCACCGTGTATAACGAGCTGACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAA TGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCGAGCAGAAAAAGGCCATCGTGGACCTGCTG TTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTGAAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAA AATCGAGTGCTTCGACTCCGTGGAAATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCAACGCCTC CCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAAAATTATCAAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGACA ATGAGGAAAACGAGGACATTCTGGAAGATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGAG GACAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTGAAAACCTATGCCCACCTGTTCGACGACAA AGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGAGATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGG AAGCTGATCAACGGCATCCGGGACAAGCAGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGATTTCCT GAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAACTTCATGCAGCTGATCCACGACGACAGCC TGACCTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAGAAAGCCCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCTG CACGAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCAGCCCCGCCATTAAGAAGGGCATCCTGCA GACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGTGAAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCCGAG AACATCGTGATCGAAATGGCCAGAGAGAACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAGAAGA ACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGAAGAGGGCATCAAAGAGCTGGGCAGCCA GATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGTGGAAAACACCCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAAGCTGTACC TGTACTACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGGATATGTACGTGGACCAGGAACTGGACATCAAC CGGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACCATATCGTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAAGGACGAC TCCATCGACAACAAGGTGCTGACCAGAAGCGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAGAGCGACA ACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGAAGATGAAGAACTACTGGCGGCAGCTGCTG AACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGAGAAAGTTCGACAATCTGACCAAGGCCGAGAGAGG CGGCCTGAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGCTTCATCAAGAGACAGCTGGTGGAAACCC GGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGATCCTGGACTCCCGGATGAACACTAAGTAC GACGAGAATGACAAGCTGATCCGGGAAGTGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCAAGCT GGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGTTTTACAAAGTGCGCGAGATCAACAACTA CCACCACGCCCACGACGCCTACCTGAACGCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATCAAAA AGTACCCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGACTACAAGGTGTACGACGTG CGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGGAAATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCCAAGTACTT CTTCTACAGCAACATCATGAACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCAACGGCGA GATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAAACGGCGAAACCGGGGAGATCGTGTGGG ATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGTGCGGAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAAGTGAAT ATCGTGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCAGCAAAGAGTCTATCCTGCC CAAGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCCAGAAAGAAGGACTGGGACCCTAAGAAG TACGGCGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGTGGCCTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGCCAAAGTG GAAAAGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAAGAGCTGCTGGGGATCACCA TCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAATCCCATCGACTTTCTGGAAGCCAAGGGC TACAAAGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCTAAGTACTCCCTGTTCGA GCTGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGGCCTCTGCCGGCGAACTGCAGAAGGGA AACGAACTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTGAACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGCCACTAT GAGAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAGAAACAGCTGTTTGTGGAACA GCACAAGCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCGAGCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAGAGAG TGATCCTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGCCTACAACAAGCACCGG GATAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAATATCATCCACCTGTTTACCCTGACCAA TCTGGGAGCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACCATCGACCGGAAGAGGTA CACCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGATCCACCAGAGCATCACCGGCC TGTACGAGACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCGACAAAAGGCCGGCGGCC ACGAAAAAGGCCGGCCAGGCAAAAAAGAAAAAGtaa 13. Sp_Δ_hel 2-A(EAAAK)3ALEA(EAAAK)3 ALEA(EAAAK)3A helical domain 2 deletion (from ortholog alignment) (“A(EAAAK)3ALEA(EAAAK)3ALEA(EAAAK)3A” disclosed as SEQ ID NO: 95) (SEQ ID NO: 96) ATGGCCCCAAAGAAGAAGCGGAAGGTCGGTATCCACGGAGTCCCAGCAG CCGACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGACATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGCTGGGCC GTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCAACAC CGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACAGCGGCG AAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACACCAGACG GAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAGGTGG ACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGATAAGAAG CACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACGAGAA GTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAAGGCCG ACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCACTTCC TGATCGAGGGCGACgctGAAGCTGCTGCTAAAGAAGCTGCTGCTAAAGAAGCTGCTG CTAAAGccCTGGAGgctGAAGCTGCTGCTAAAGAAGCTGCTGCTAAAGAAGCTGCTGC TAAAGccCTGGAGgctGAAGCTGCTGCTAAAGAAGCTGCTGCTAAAGAAGCTGCTGCT AAAgctATCACCAAGGCCCCCCTGAGCGCCTCTATGATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCAC CACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCTGAAAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTA CAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAGAGCAAGAACGGCTACGCCGGCTACATTGACGGCG GAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTACAAGTTCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGAC GGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGTGAAGCTGAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAAGCAGC GGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATCCCCCACCAGATCCACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCC ATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATTTTTACCCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGAT CGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCATCCCCTACTACGTGGGCCCTCTGGCCAGGGGAAA CAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACCAGAAAGAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACT TCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAAGGGCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGATGACC AACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCAACGAGAAGGTGCTGCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTA CGAGTACTTCACCGTGTATAACGAGCTGACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAA TGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCGAGCAGAAAAAGGCCATCGTGGACCTGCTG TTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTGAAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAA AATCGAGTGCTTCGACTCCGTGGAAATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCAACGCCTC CCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAAAATTATCAAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGACA ATGAGGAAAACGAGGACATTCTGGAAGATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGAG GACAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTGAAAACCTATGCCCACCTGTTCGACGACAA AGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGAGATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGG AAGCTGATCAACGGCATCCGGGACAAGCAGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGATTTCCT GAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAACTTCATGCAGCTGATCCACGACGACAGCC TGACCTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAGAAAGCCCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCTG CACGAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCAGCCCCGCCATTAAGAAGGGCATCCTGCA GACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGTGAAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCCGAG AACATCGTGATCGAAATGGCCAGAGAGAACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAGAAGA ACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGAAGAGGGCATCAAAGAGCTGGGCAGCCA GATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGTGGAAAACACCCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAAGCTGTACC TGTACTACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGGATATGTACGTGGACCAGGAACTGGACATCAAC CGGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACCATATCGTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAAGGACGAC TCCATCGACAACAAGGTGCTGACCAGAAGCGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAGAGCGACA ACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGAAGATGAAGAACTACTGGCGGCAGCTGCTG AACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGAGAAAGTTCGACAATCTGACCAAGGCCGAGAGAGG CGGCCTGAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGCTTCATCAAGAGACAGCTGGTGGAAACCC GGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGATCCTGGACTCCCGGATGAACACTAAGTAC GACGAGAATGACAAGCTGATCCGGGAAGTGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCAAGCT GGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGTTTTACAAAGTGCGCGAGATCAACAACTA CCACCACGCCCACGACGCCTACCTGAACGCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATCAAAA AGTACCCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGACTACAAGGTGTACGACGTG CGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGGAAATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCCAAGTACTT CTTCTACAGCAACATCATGAACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCAACGGCGA GATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAAACGGCGAAACCGGGGAGATCGTGTGGG ATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGTGCGGAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAAGTGAAT ATCGTGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCAGCAAAGAGTCTATCCTGCC CAAGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCCAGAAAGAAGGACTGGGACCCTAAGAAG TACGGCGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGTGGCCTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGCCAAAGTG GAAAAGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAAGAGCTGCTGGGGATCACCA TCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAATCCCATCGACTTTCTGGAAGCCAAGGGC TACAAAGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCTAAGTACTCCCTGTTCGA GCTGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGGCCTCTGCCGGCGAACTGCAGAAGGGA AACGAACTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTGAACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGCCACTAT GAGAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAGAAACAGCTGTTTGTGGAACA GCACAAGCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCGAGCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAGAGAG TGATCCTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGCCTACAACAAGCACCGG GATAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAATATCATCCACCTGTTTACCCTGACCAA TCTGGGAGCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACCATCGACCGGAAGAGGTA CACCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGATCCACCAGAGCATCACCGGCC TGTACGAGACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCGACAAAAGGCCGGCGGCC ACGAAAAAGGCCGGCCAGGCAAAAAAGAAAAAGtaa 14. Sp_del_hel 2- A(EAAAK)3ALEA(EAAAK)3ALEA(EAAAK)3ALEA(EAAAK)3A helical domain 2 deletion (from ortholog alignment) (“A(EAAAK)3ALEA(EAAAK)3ALEA(EAAAK)3ALEA(EAAAK)3A” disclosed as SEQ ID NO: 97) (SEQ ID NO: 98) ATGGCCCCAAAGAAGAAGCGGAAGGTCGGTATCCACGGAGTCCCAGCAG CCGACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGACATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGCTGGGCC GTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCAACAC CGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACAGCGGCG AAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACACCAGACG GAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAGGTGG ACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGATAAGAAG CACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACGAGAA GTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAAGGCCG ACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCACTTCC TGATCGAGGGCGACgctGAAGCTGCTGCTAAAGAAGCTGCTGCTAAAGAAGCTGCTG CTAAAGccCTGGAGgctGAAGCTGCTGCTAAAGAAGCTGCTGCTAAAGAAGCTGCTGC TAAAGccCTGGAGgctGAAGCTGCTGCTAAAGAAGCTGCTGCTAAAGAAGCTGCTGCT AAAGccCTGGAGgctGAAGCTGCTGCTAAAGAAGCTGCTGCTAAAGAAGCTGCTGCTA AAgctATCACCAAGGCCCCCCTGAGCGCCTCTATGATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCACC ACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCTGAAAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTAC AAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAGAGCAAGAACGGCTACGCCGGCTACATTGACGGCGG AGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTACAAGTTCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGACG GCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGTGAAGCTGAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAAGCAGCG GACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATCCCCCACCAGATCCACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCCA TTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATTTTTACCCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGATC GAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCATCCCCTACTACGTGGGCCCTCTGGCCAGGGGAAAC AGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACCAGAAAGAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACTT CGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAAGGGCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGATGACCA ACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCAACGAGAAGGTGCTGCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTAC GAGTACTTCACCGTGTATAACGAGCTGACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAAT GAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCGAGCAGAAAAAGGCCATCGTGGACCTGCTGT TCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTGAAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAAA ATCGAGTGCTTCGACTCCGTGGAAATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCAACGCCTCC CTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAAAATTATCAAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGACAA TGAGGAAAACGAGGACATTCTGGAAGATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGAGG ACAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTGAAAACCTATGCCCACCTGTTCGACGACAAA GTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGAGATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGGA AGCTGATCAACGGCATCCGGGACAAGCAGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGATTTCCTG AAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAACTTCATGCAGCTGATCCACGACGACAGCCT GACCTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAGAAAGCCCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCTGC ACGAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCAGCCCCGCCATTAAGAAGGGCATCCTGCAG ACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGTGAAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCCGAGA ACATCGTGATCGAAATGGCCAGAGAGAACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAGAAGAA CAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGAAGAGGGCATCAAAGAGCTGGGCAGCCAG ATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGTGGAAAACACCCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAAGCTGTACCT GTACTACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGGATATGTACGTGGACCAGGAACTGGACATCAACC GGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACCATATCGTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAAGGACGACT CCATCGACAACAAGGTGCTGACCAGAAGCGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAGAGCGACAA CGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGAAGATGAAGAACTACTGGCGGCAGCTGCTGA ACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGAGAAAGTTCGACAATCTGACCAAGGCCGAGAGAGGC GGCCTGAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGCTTCATCAAGAGACAGCTGGTGGAAACCCG GCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGATCCTGGACTCCCGGATGAACACTAAGTACG ACGAGAATGACAAGCTGATCCGGGAAGTGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCAAGCTG GTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGTTTTACAAAGTGCGCGAGATCAACAACTAC CACCACGCCCACGACGCCTACCTGAACGCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATCAAAAA GTACCCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGACTACAAGGTGTACGACGTGC GGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGGAAATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCCAAGTACTTC TTCTACAGCAACATCATGAACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCAACGGCGAG ATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAAACGGCGAAACCGGGGAGATCGTGTGGGA TAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGTGCGGAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAAGTGAATA TCGTGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCAGCAAAGAGTCTATCCTGCCC AAGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCCAGAAAGAAGGACTGGGACCCTAAGAAGT ACGGCGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGTGGCCTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGCCAAAGTGG AAAAGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAAGAGCTGCTGGGGATCACCATC ATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAATCCCATCGACTTTCTGGAAGCCAAGGGCTA CAAAGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCTAAGTACTCCCTGTTCGAGC TGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGGCCTCTGCCGGCGAACTGCAGAAGGGAAA CGAACTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTGAACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGCCACTATGA GAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAGAAACAGCTGTTTGTGGAACAGC ACAAGCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCGAGCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAGAGAGTG ATCCTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGCCTACAACAAGCACCGGGA TAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAATATCATCCACCTGTTTACCCTGACCAATCT GGGAGCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACCATCGACCGGAAGAGGTACA CCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGATCCACCAGAGCATCACCGGCCTG TACGAGACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCGACAAAAGGCCGGCGGCCAC GAAAAAGGCCGGCCAGGCAAAAAAGAAAAAGtaa 30. Sp_del (175-307) (Hiroshi's prediction) (SEQ ID NO: 99) ATGGCCCCAAAGAAGAAGCGGAAGGTCGGTATCCACGGAGTCCCAGCAG CCGACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGACATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGCTGGGCC GTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCAACAC CGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACAGCGGCG AAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACACCAGACG GAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAGGTGG ACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGATAAGAAG CACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACGAGAA GTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAAGGCCG ACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCACTTCC TGATCGAGGGCGACCTGGTGAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCCCTGAGCGCCTCT ATGATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCTGAAAGCTCTCGT GCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAGAGCAAGAACG GCTACGCCGGCTACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTACAAGTTCATC AAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGTGAAGCTGAACAG AGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATCCCCCACCAGA TCCACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATTTTTACCCATTCC TGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCATCCCCTACTAC GTGGGCCCTCTGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACCAGAAAGAGCGA GGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAAGGGCGCTTCCGCCC AGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGATGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCAACGAGAAGGTG CTGCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTATAACGAGCTGACCAAA GTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAATGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCGAGCAGAA AAAGGCCATCGTGGACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTGAAGCAGC TGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCTTCGACTCCGTGGAAATCTCCGGC GTGGAAGATCGGTTCAACGCCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAAAATTATC AAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGACATTCTGGAAGATATCGT GCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGAGGACAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTGAAAACCT ATGCCCACCTGTTCGACGACAAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGAGATACACC GGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGCTGATCAACGGCATCCGGGACAAGCAGTCCGG CAAGACAATCCTGGATTTCCTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAACTTCATGCA GCTGATCCACGACGACAGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAGAAAGCCCAGGTGT CCGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCTGCACGAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCAGCCCCGCC ATTAAGAAGGGCATCCTGCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGTGAAAGTGAT GGGCCGGCACAAGCCCGAGAACATCGTGATCGAAATGGCCAGAGAGAACCAGACC ACCCAGAAGGGACAGAAGAACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGAAGAGGGCA TCAAAGAGCTGGGCAGCCAGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGTGGAAAACACCCAGCTG CAGAACGAGAAGCTGTACCTGTACTACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGGATATGTACGTGGA CCAGGAACTGGACATCAACCGGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACCATATCGTGCCTCA GAGCTTTCTGAAGGACGACTCCATCGACAACAAGGTGCTGACCAGAAGCGACAAGA ACCGGGGCAAGAGCGACAACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGAAGATGAAGAA CTACTGGCGGCAGCTGCTGAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGAGAAAGTTCGACAATC TGACCAAGGCCGAGAGAGGCGGCCTGAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGCTTCATCAAG AGACAGCTGGTGGAAACCCGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGATCCTGGACTC CCGGATGAACACTAAGTACGACGAGAATGACAAGCTGATCCGGGAAGTGAAAGTGA TCACCCTGAAGTCCAAGCTGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGTTTTACAAAG TGCGCGAGATCAACAACTACCACCACGCCCACGACGCCTACCTGAACGCCGTCGTG GGAACCGCCCTGATCAAAAAGTACCCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGA CTACAAGGTGTACGACGTGCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGGAAATCGGCA AGGCTACCGCCAAGTACTTCTTCTACAGCAACATCATGAACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGA TTACCCTGGCCAACGGCGAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAAACGGCGAA ACCGGGGAGATCGTGTGGGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGTGCGGAAAGTGCT GAGCATGCCCCAAGTGAATATCGTGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCA GCAAAGAGTCTATCCTGCCCAAGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCCAGAAAGAAG GACTGGGACCCTAAGAAGTACGGCGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGTGGCCTATTCTGTG CTGGTGGTGGCCAAAGTGGAAAAGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAAG AGCTGCTGGGGATCACCATCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAATCCCATCGAC TTTCTGGAAGCCAAGGGCTACAAAGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCC TAAGTACTCCCTGTTCGAGCTGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGGCCTCTGCCG GCGAACTGCAGAAGGGAAACGAACTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTGAACTTCCTG TACCTGGCCAGCCACTATGAGAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAGAA ACAGCTGTTTGTGGAACAGCACAAGCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCGAGCAGATCA GCGAGTTCTCCAAGAGAGTGATCCTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCG CCTACAACAAGCACCGGGATAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAATATCATCCAC CTGTTTACCCTGACCAATCTGGGAGCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACC ATCGACCGGAAGAGGTACACCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGATCCA CCAGAGCATCACCGGCCTGTACGAGACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCG ACAAAAGGCCGGCGGCCACGAAAAAGGCCGGCCAGGCAAAAAAGAAAAAGtaa 31. Sp_del (1098-end) (SEQ ID NO: 100) ATGGCCCCAAAGAAGAAGCGGAAGGTCGGTATCCACGGAGTCCCAGCAG CCGACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGACATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGCTGGGCC GTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCAACAC CGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACAGCGGCG AAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACACCAGACG GAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAGGTGG ACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGATAAGAAG CACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACGAGAA GTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAAGGCCG ACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCACTTCC TGATCGAGGGCGACCTGAACCCCGACAACAGCGACGTGGACAAGCTGTTCATCCAG CTGGTGCAGACCTACAACCAGCTGTTCGAGGAAAACCCCATCAACGCCAGCGGCGT GGACGCCAAGGCCATCCTGTCTGCCAGACTGAGCAAGAGCAGACGGCTGGAAAATC TGATCGCCCAGCTGCCCGGCGAGAAGAAGAATGGCCTGTTCGGAAACCTGATTGCC CTGAGCCTGGGCCTGACCCCCAACTTCAAGAGCAACTTCGACCTGGCCGAGGATGC CAAACTGCAGCTGAGCAAGGACACCTACGACGACGACCTGGACAACCTGCTGGCCC AGATCGGCGACCAGTACGCCGACCTGTTTCTGGCCGCCAAGAACCTGTCCGACGCC ATCCTGCTGAGCGACATCCTGAGAGTGAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCCCTGAG CGCCTCTATGATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCTGAAAG CTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAGAGCA AGAACGGCTACGCCGGCTACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTACAAG TTCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGTGAAGCT GAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATCCCCC ACCAGATCCACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATTTTTAC CCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCATCCC CTACTACGTGGGCCCTCTGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACCAGAA AGAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAAGGGCGCT TCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGATGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCAACGA GAAGGTGCTGCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTATAACGAGCT GACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAATGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCG AGCAGAAAAAGGCCATCGTGGACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTG AAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCTTCGACTCCGTGGAAAT CTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCAACGCCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAA AATTATCAAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGACATTCTGGAAG ATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGAGGACAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTG AAAACCTATGCCCACCTGTTCGACGACAAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGAG ATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGCTGATCAACGGCATCCGGGACAAGC AGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGATTTCCTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAAC TTCATGCAGCTGATCCACGACGACAGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAGAAAGC CCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCTGCACGAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCA GCCCCGCCATTAAGAAGGGCATCCTGCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGTG AAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCCGAGAACATCGTGATCGAAATGGCCAGAGAGA ACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAGAAGAACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGA AGAGGGCATCAAAGAGCTGGGCAGCCAGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGTGGAAAAC ACCCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAAGCTGTACCTGTACTACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGGATAT GTACGTGGACCAGGAACTGGACATCAACCGGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACCATA TCGTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAAGGACGACTCCATCGACAACAAGGTGCTGACCAGA AGCGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAGAGCGACAACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGA AGATGAAGAACTACTGGCGGCAGCTGCTGAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGAGAAAG TTCGACAATCTGACCAAGGCCGAGAGAGGCGGCCTGAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGG CTTCATCAAGAGACAGCTGGTGGAAACCCGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGA TCCTGGACTCCCGGATGAACACTAAGTACGACGAGAATGACAAGCTGATCCGGGAA GTGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCAAGCTGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAG TTTTACAAAGTGCGCGAGATCAACAACTACCACCACGCCCACGACGCCTACCTGAA CGCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATCAAAAAGTACCCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCG TGTACGGCGACTACAAGGTGTACGACGTGCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAG GAAATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCCAAGTACTTCTTCTACAGCAACATCATGAACTTTTTC AAGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCAACGGCGAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGAC AAACGGCGAAACCGGGGAGATCGTGTGGGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGTGC GGAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAAGTGAATATCGTGAAAAAGACCAAAAGGCCGGCG GCCACGAAAAAGGCCGGCCAGGCAAAAAAGAAAAAGtaa 32. Sp_del (175-307)-(GGGGS)3 (“(GGGGS)3” disclosed as SEQ ID NO: 9) (SEQ ID NO: 101) ATGGCCCCAAAGAAGAAGCGGAAGGTCGGTATCCACGGAGTCCCAGCAG CCGACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGACATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGCTGGGCC GTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCAACAC CGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACAGCGGCG AAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACACCAGACG GAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAGGTGG ACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGATAAGAAG CACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACGAGAA GTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAAGGCCG ACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCACTTCC TGATCGAGGGCGACCTGGGTGGaGGTGGCtcgGGTGGaGGTGGCtcgGGTGGaGGTGGCt cgGTGAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCCCTGAGCGCCTCTATGATCAAGAGATACG ACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCTGAAAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCT GAGAAGTACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAGAGCAAGAACGGCTACGCCGGCTACAT TGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTACAAGTTCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAA AGATGGACGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGTGAAGCTGAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGG AAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATCCCCCACCAGATCCACCTGGGAGAGCT GCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATTTTTACCCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGG AAAAGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCATCCCCTACTACGTGGGCCCTCTGGCCA GGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACCAGAAAGAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCC CTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAAGGGCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGC GGATGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCAACGAGAAGGTGCTGCCCAAGCACAGC CTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTATAACGAGCTGACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACC GAGGGAATGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCGAGCAGAAAAAGGCCATCGTGG ACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTGAAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTAC TTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCTTCGACTCCGTGGAAATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTC AACGCCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAAAATTATCAAGGACAAGGACTT CCTGGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGACATTCTGGAAGATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACAC TGTTTGAGGACAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTGAAAACCTATGCCCACCTGTTC GACGACAAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGAGATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGC TGAGCCGGAAGCTGATCAACGGCATCCGGGACAAGCAGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTG GATTTCCTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAACTTCATGCAGCTGATCCACGAC GACAGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAGAAAGCCCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGA TAGCCTGCACGAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCAGCCCCGCCATTAAGAAGGGCA TCCTGCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGTGAAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAG CCCGAGAACATCGTGATCGAAATGGCCAGAGAGAACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGAC AGAAGAACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGAAGAGGGCATCAAAGAGCTGGG CAGCCAGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGTGGAAAACACCCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAAG CTGTACCTGTACTACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGGATATGTACGTGGACCAGGAACTGGA CATCAACCGGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACCATATCGTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAA GGACGACTCCATCGACAACAAGGTGCTGACCAGAAGCGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAG AGCGACAACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGAAGATGAAGAACTACTGGCGGCA GCTGCTGAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGAGAAAGTTCGACAATCTGACCAAGGCCG AGAGAGGCGGCCTGAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGCTTCATCAAGAGACAGCTGGTG GAAACCCGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGATCCTGGACTCCCGGATGAACAC TAAGTACGACGAGAATGACAAGCTGATCCGGGAAGTGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGT CCAAGCTGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGTTTTACAAAGTGCGCGAGATCA ACAACTACCACCACGCCCACGACGCCTACCTGAACGCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTG ATCAAAAAGTACCCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGACTACAAGGTGTA CGACGTGCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGGAAATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCC AAGTACTTCTTCTACAGCAACATCATGAACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCC AACGGCGAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAAACGGCGAAACCGGGGAGA TCGTGTGGGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGTGCGGAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCC CAAGTGAATATCGTGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCAGCAAAGAGTC TATCCTGCCCAAGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCCAGAAAGAAGGACTGGGACC CTAAGAAGTACGGCGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGTGGCCTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGG CCAAAGTGGAAAAGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAAGAGCTGCTGGG GATCACCATCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAATCCCATCGACTTTCTGGAAG CCAAGGGCTACAAAGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCTAAGTACTCC CTGTTCGAGCTGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGGCCTCTGCCGGCGAACTGCA GAAGGGAAACGAACTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTGAACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCA GCCACTATGAGAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAGAAACAGCTGTTT GTGGAACAGCACAAGCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCGAGCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTC CAAGAGAGTGATCCTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGCCTACAACA AGCACCGGGATAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAATATCATCCACCTGTTTACC CTGACCAATCTGGGAGCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACCATCGACCGG AAGAGGTACACCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGATCCACCAGAGCAT CACCGGCCTGTACGAGACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCGACAAAAGGC CGGCGGCCACGAAAAAGGCCGGCCAGGCAAAAAAGAAAAAGtaa 33. Sp_del (175-307)-(GGGGS)6 (“(GGGGS)6” disclosed as SEQ ID NO: 10) (SEQ ID NO: 102) ATGGCCCCAAAGAAGAAGCGGAAGGTCGGTATCCACGGAGTCCCAGCAG CCGACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGACATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGCTGGGCC GTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCAACAC CGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACAGCGGCG AAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACACCAGACG GAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAGGTGG ACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGATAAGAAG CACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACGAGAA GTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAAGGCCG ACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCACTTCC TGATCGAGGGCGACCTGGGTGGaGGTGGCtcgGGTGGaGGTGGCtcgGGTGGaGGTGGCt cgGGTGGaGGTGGCtcgGGTGGaGGTGGCtcgGGTGGaGGTGGCtcgGTGAACACCGAGAT CACCAAGGCCCCCCTGAGCGCCTCTATGATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGG ACCTGACCCTGCTGAAAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAAAGAG ATTTTCTTCGACCAGAGCAAGAACGGCTACGCCGGCTACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAG CCAGGAAGAGTTCTACAAGTTCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCG AGGAACTGCTCGTGAAGCTGAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAAGCAGCGGACCTTC GACAACGGCAGCATCCCCCACCAGATCCACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCG GCGGCAGGAAGATTTTTACCCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGAGAAGA TCCTGACCTTCCGCATCCCCTACTACGTGGGCCCTCTGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGAT TCGCCTGGATGACCAGAAAGAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAA GTGGTGGACAAGGGCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGATGACCAACTTCGA TAAGAACCTGCCCAACGAGAAGGTGCTGCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACT TCACCGTGTATAACGAGCTGACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAATGAGAAAG CCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCGAGCAGAAAAAGGCCATCGTGGACCTGCTGTTCAAGAC CAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTGAAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGT GCTTCGACTCCGTGGAAATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCAACGCCTCCCTGGGCA CATACCACGATCTGCTGAAAATTATCAAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGACAATGAGGAA AACGAGGACATTCTGGAAGATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGAGGACAGAGA GATGATCGAGGAACGGCTGAAAACCTATGCCCACCTGTTCGACGACAAAGTGATGA AGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGAGATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGCTGAT CAACGGCATCCGGGACAAGCAGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGATTTCCTGAAGTCCG ACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAACTTCATGCAGCTGATCCACGACGACAGCCTGACCTTTA AAGAGGACATCCAGAAAGCCCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCTGCACGAGCAC ATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCAGCCCCGCCATTAAGAAGGGCATCCTGCAGACAGTGAA GGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGTGAAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCCGAGAACATCGTGA TCGAAATGGCCAGAGAGAACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAGAAGAACAGCCGCGA GAGAATGAAGCGGATCGAAGAGGGCATCAAAGAGCTGGGCAGCCAGATCCTGAAA GAACACCCCGTGGAAAACACCCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAAGCTGTACCTGTACTACCT GCAGAATGGGCGGGATATGTACGTGGACCAGGAACTGGACATCAACCGGCTGTCCG ACTACGATGTGGACCATATCGTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAAGGACGACTCCATCGACA ACAAGGTGCTGACCAGAAGCGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAGAGCGACAACGTGCCCTC CGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGAAGATGAAGAACTACTGGCGGCAGCTGCTGAACGCCAAGC TGATTACCCAGAGAAAGTTCGACAATCTGACCAAGGCCGAGAGAGGCGGCCTGAGC GAACTGGATAAGGCCGGCTTCATCAAGAGACAGCTGGTGGAAACCCGGCAGATCAC AAAGCACGTGGCACAGATCCTGGACTCCCGGATGAACACTAAGTACGACGAGAATG ACAAGCTGATCCGGGAAGTGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCAAGCTGGTGTCCGAT TTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGTTTTACAAAGTGCGCGAGATCAACAACTACCACCACGCC CACGACGCCTACCTGAACGCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATCAAAAAGTACCCTAA GCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGACTACAAGGTGTACGACGTGCGGAAGATGA TCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGGAAATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCCAAGTACTTCTTCTACAGC AACATCATGAACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCAACGGCGAGATCCGGAA GCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAAACGGCGAAACCGGGGAGATCGTGTGGGATAAGGGCC GGGATTTTGCCACCGTGCGGAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAAGTGAATATCGTGAAA AAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCAGCAAAGAGTCTATCCTGCCCAAGAGGAA CAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCCAGAAAGAAGGACTGGGACCCTAAGAAGTACGGCGGCT TCGACAGCCCCACCGTGGCCTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGCCAAAGTGGAAAAGGGC AAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAAGAGCTGCTGGGGATCACCATCATGGAAAG AAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAATCCCATCGACTTTCTGGAAGCCAAGGGCTACAAAGAAG TGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCTAAGTACTCCCTGTTCGAGCTGGAAAAC GGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGGCCTCTGCCGGCGAACTGCAGAAGGGAAACGAACTGG CCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTGAACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGCCACTATGAGAAGCTGA AGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAGAAACAGCTGTTTGTGGAACAGCACAAGCAC TACCTGGACGAGATCATCGAGCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAGAGAGTGATCCTGGC CGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGCCTACAACAAGCACCGGGATAAGCCCA TCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAATATCATCCACCTGTTTACCCTGACCAATCTGGGAGCCC CTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACCATCGACCGGAAGAGGTACACCAGCACC AAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGATCCACCAGAGCATCACCGGCCTGTACGAGAC ACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCGACAAAAGGCCGGCGGCCACGAAAAAG GCCGGCCAGGCAAAAAAGAAAAAGtaa 34. Sp_del (175-307)-(GGGGS)9 (“(GGGGS)9” disclosed as SEQ ID NO: 11) (SEQ ID NO: 103) ATGGCCCCAAAGAAGAAGCGGAAGGTCGGTATCCACGGAGTCCCAGCAG CCGACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGACATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGCTGGGCC GTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCAACAC CGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACAGCGGCG AAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACACCAGACG GAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAGGTGG ACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGATAAGAAG CACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACGAGAA GTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAAGGCCG ACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCACTTCC TGATCGAGGGCGACCTGGGTGGaGGTGGCtcgGGTGGaGGTGGCtcgGGTGGaGGTGGCt cgGGTGGaGGTGGCtcgGGTGGaGGTGGCtcgGGTGGaGGTGGCtcgGGTGGaGGTGGCtcgG GTGGaGGTGGCtcgGGTGGaGGTGGCtcgGTGAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCCCTG AGCGCCTCTATGATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCTGAA AGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAGA GCAAGAACGGCTACGCCGGCTACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTAC AAGTTCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGTGAA GCTGAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATCC CCCACCAGATCCACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATTTTT ACCCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCATC CCCTACTACGTGGGCCCTCTGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACCAG AAAGAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAAGGGC GCTTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGATGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCAAC GAGAAGGTGCTGCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTATAACGA GCTGACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAATGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCG GCGAGCAGAAAAAGGCCATCGTGGACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACC GTGAAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCTTCGACTCCGTGGA AATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCAACGCCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCT GAAAATTATCAAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGACATTCTGG AAGATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGAGGACAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGG CTGAAAACCTATGCCCACCTGTTCGACGACAAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCG GAGATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGCTGATCAACGGCATCCGGGACA AGCAGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGATTTCCTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGA AACTTCATGCAGCTGATCCACGACGACAGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAGAA AGCCCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCTGCACGAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCG GCAGCCCCGCCATTAAGAAGGGCATCCTGCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTC GTGAAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCCGAGAACATCGTGATCGAAATGGCCAGAGA GAACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAGAAGAACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATC GAAGAGGGCATCAAAGAGCTGGGCAGCCAGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGTGGAAA ACACCCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAAGCTGTACCTGTACTACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGGAT ATGTACGTGGACCAGGAACTGGACATCAACCGGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACCA TATCGTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAAGGACGACTCCATCGACAACAAGGTGCTGACCAG AAGCGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAGAGCGACAACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAG AAGATGAAGAACTACTGGCGGCAGCTGCTGAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGAGAAA GTTCGACAATCTGACCAAGGCCGAGAGAGGCGGCCTGAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCG GCTTCATCAAGAGACAGCTGGTGGAAACCCGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAG ATCCTGGACTCCCGGATGAACACTAAGTACGACGAGAATGACAAGCTGATCCGGGA AGTGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCAAGCTGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCA GTTTTACAAAGTGCGCGAGATCAACAACTACCACCACGCCCACGACGCCTACCTGA ACGCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATCAAAAAGTACCCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTC GTGTACGGCGACTACAAGGTGTACGACGTGCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCA GGAAATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCCAAGTACTTCTTCTACAGCAACATCATGAACTTTTT CAAGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCAACGGCGAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGA CAAACGGCGAAACCGGGGAGATCGTGTGGGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGTG CGGAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAAGTGAATATCGTGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGAC AGGCGGCTTCAGCAAAGAGTCTATCCTGCCCAAGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCG CCAGAAAGAAGGACTGGGACCCTAAGAAGTACGGCGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGTG GCCTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGCCAAAGTGGAAAAGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAA GAGTGTGAAAGAGCTGCTGGGGATCACCATCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGA ATCCCATCGACTTTCTGGAAGCCAAGGGCTACAAAGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATC ATCAAGCTGCCTAAGTACTCCCTGTTCGAGCTGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCT GGCCTCTGCCGGCGAACTGCAGAAGGGAAACGAACTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATG TGAACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGCCACTATGAGAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGAT AATGAGCAGAAACAGCTGTTTGTGGAACAGCACAAGCACTACCTGGACGAGATCAT CGAGCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAGAGAGTGATCCTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACA AAGTGCTGTCCGCCTACAACAAGCACCGGGATAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAG AATATCATCCACCTGTTTACCCTGACCAATCTGGGAGCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTAC TTTGACACCACCATCGACCGGAAGAGGTACACCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGC CACCCTGATCCACCAGAGCATCACCGGCCTGTACGAGACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCA GCTGGGAGGCGACAAAAGGCCGGCGGCCACGAAAAAGGCCGGCCAGGCAAAAAAG AAAAAGtaa 35. Sp_del (175-307)-(GGGGS)12 (“(GGGGS)12” disclosed as SEQ ID NO: 12) (SEQ ID NO: 104) ATGGCCCCAAAGAAGAAGCGGAAGGTCGGTATCCACGGAGTCCCAGCAG CCGACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGACATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGCTGGGCC GTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCAACAC CGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACAGCGGCG AAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACACCAGACG GAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAGGTGG ACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGATAAGAAG CACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACGAGAA GTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAAGGCCG ACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCACTTCC TGATCGAGGGCGACCTGGGTGGaGGTGGttcgGGTGGCGGTGGCtcgGGTGGaGGTGGatc gGGTGGCGGTGGttcgGGTGGaGGTGGCtcgGGcGGaGGTGGatcgGGTGGCGGTGGCtcgGG TGGaGGTGGCtcgGGTGGaGGTGGCtcgGGTGGCGGTGGatcgGGTGGaGGTGGatcgGGTG GaGGTGGttcgGTGAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCCCTGAGCGCCTCTATGATCAA GAGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCTGAAAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGC AGCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAGAGCAAGAACGGCTACGCC GGCTACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTACAAGTTCATCAAGCCCAT CCTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGTGAAGCTGAACAGAGAGGAC CTGCTGCGGAAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATCCCCCACCAGATCCACCT GGGAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATTTTTACCCATTCCTGAAGG ACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCATCCCCTACTACGTGGGC CCTCTGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACCAGAAAGAGCGAGGAAA CCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAAGGGCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGC TTCATCGAGCGGATGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCAACGAGAAGGTGCTGCC CAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTATAACGAGCTGACCAAAGTGA AATACGTGACCGAGGGAATGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCGAGCAGAAAAA GGCCATCGTGGACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTGAAGCAGCTGA AAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCTTCGACTCCGTGGAAATCTCCGGCGTG GAAGATCGGTTCAACGCCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAAAATTATCAAG GACAAGGACTTCCTGGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGACATTCTGGAAGATATCGTGCT GACCCTGACACTGTTTGAGGACAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTGAAAACCTATG CCCACCTGTTCGACGACAAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGAGATACACCGGC TGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGCTGATCAACGGCATCCGGGACAAGCAGTCCGGCAA GACAATCCTGGATTTCCTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAACTTCATGCAGCT GATCCACGACGACAGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAGAAAGCCCAGGTGTCCG GCCAGGGCGATAGCCTGCACGAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCAGCCCCGCCATT AAGAAGGGCATCCTGCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGTGAAAGTGATGGG CCGGCACAAGCCCGAGAACATCGTGATCGAAATGGCCAGAGAGAACCAGACCACCC AGAAGGGACAGAAGAACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGAAGAGGGCATCAA AGAGCTGGGCAGCCAGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGTGGAAAACACCCAGCTGCAGA ACGAGAAGCTGTACCTGTACTACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGGATATGTACGTGGACCAG GAACTGGACATCAACCGGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACCATATCGTGCCTCAGAG CTTTCTGAAGGACGACTCCATCGACAACAAGGTGCTGACCAGAAGCGACAAGAACC GGGGCAAGAGCGACAACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGAAGATGAAGAACTA CTGGCGGCAGCTGCTGAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGAGAAAGTTCGACAATCTGA CCAAGGCCGAGAGAGGCGGCCTGAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGCTTCATCAAGAG ACAGCTGGTGGAAACCCGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGATCCTGGACTCCC GGATGAACACTAAGTACGACGAGAATGACAAGCTGATCCGGGAAGTGAAAGTGATC ACCCTGAAGTCCAAGCTGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGTTTTACAAAGTG CGCGAGATCAACAACTACCACCACGCCCACGACGCCTACCTGAACGCCGTCGTGGG AACCGCCCTGATCAAAAAGTACCCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGACT ACAAGGTGTACGACGTGCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGGAAATCGGCAA GGCTACCGCCAAGTACTTCTTCTACAGCAACATCATGAACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGAT TACCCTGGCCAACGGCGAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAAACGGCGAAA CCGGGGAGATCGTGTGGGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGTGCGGAAAGTGCTG AGCATGCCCCAAGTGAATATCGTGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCAG CAAAGAGTCTATCCTGCCCAAGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCCAGAAAGAAGG ACTGGGACCCTAAGAAGTACGGCGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGTGGCCTATTCTGTGC TGGTGGTGGCCAAAGTGGAAAAGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAAGA GCTGCTGGGGATCACCATCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAATCCCATCGACT TTCTGGAAGCCAAGGGCTACAAAGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCT AAGTACTCCCTGTTCGAGCTGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGGCCTCTGCCGG CGAACTGCAGAAGGGAAACGAACTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTGAACTTCCTGT ACCTGGCCAGCCACTATGAGAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAGAAA CAGCTGTTTGTGGAACAGCACAAGCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCGAGCAGATCAG CGAGTTCTCCAAGAGAGTGATCCTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGC CTACAACAAGCACCGGGATAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAATATCATCCACC TGTTTACCCTGACCAATCTGGGAGCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACCA TCGACCGGAAGAGGTACACCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGATCCAC CAGAGCATCACCGGCCTGTACGAGACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCGA CAAAAGGCCGGCGGCCACGAAAAAGGCCGGCCAGGCAAAAAAGAAAAAGtaa 36. Sp_del(175-307)-A(EAAAK)3A (“A(EAAAK)3A” disclosed as SEQ ID NO: 3) (SEQ ID NO: 105) ATGGCCCCAAAGAAGAAGCGGAAGGTCGGTATCCACGGAGTCCCAGCAG CCGACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGACATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGCTGGGCC GTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCAACAC CGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACAGCGGCG AAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACACCAGACG GAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAGGTGG ACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGATAAGAAG CACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACGAGAA GTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAAGGCCG ACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCACTTCC TGATCGAGGGCGACCTGgctGAAGCTGCTGCTAAAGAAGCTGCTGCTAAAGAAGCTG CTGCTAAAgctGTGAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCCCTGAGCGCCTCTATGATCAA GAGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCTGAAAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGC AGCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAGAGCAAGAACGGCTACGCC GGCTACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTACAAGTTCATCAAGCCCAT CCTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGTGAAGCTGAACAGAGAGGAC CTGCTGCGGAAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATCCCCCACCAGATCCACCT GGGAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATTTTTACCCATTCCTGAAGG ACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCATCCCCTACTACGTGGGC CCTCTGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACCAGAAAGAGCGAGGAAA CCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAAGGGCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGC TTCATCGAGCGGATGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCAACGAGAAGGTGCTGCC CAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTATAACGAGCTGACCAAAGTGA AATACGTGACCGAGGGAATGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCGAGCAGAAAAA GGCCATCGTGGACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTGAAGCAGCTGA AAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCTTCGACTCCGTGGAAATCTCCGGCGTG GAAGATCGGTTCAACGCCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAAAATTATCAAG GACAAGGACTTCCTGGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGACATTCTGGAAGATATCGTGCT GACCCTGACACTGTTTGAGGACAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTGAAAACCTATG CCCACCTGTTCGACGACAAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGAGATACACCGGC TGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGCTGATCAACGGCATCCGGGACAAGCAGTCCGGCAA GACAATCCTGGATTTCCTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAACTTCATGCAGCT GATCCACGACGACAGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAGAAAGCCCAGGTGTCCG GCCAGGGCGATAGCCTGCACGAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCAGCCCCGCCATT AAGAAGGGCATCCTGCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGTGAAAGTGATGGG CCGGCACAAGCCCGAGAACATCGTGATCGAAATGGCCAGAGAGAACCAGACCACCC AGAAGGGACAGAAGAACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGAAGAGGGCATCAA AGAGCTGGGCAGCCAGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGTGGAAAACACCCAGCTGCAGA ACGAGAAGCTGTACCTGTACTACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGGATATGTACGTGGACCAG GAACTGGACATCAACCGGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACCATATCGTGCCTCAGAG CTTTCTGAAGGACGACTCCATCGACAACAAGGTGCTGACCAGAAGCGACAAGAACC GGGGCAAGAGCGACAACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGAAGATGAAGAACTA CTGGCGGCAGCTGCTGAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGAGAAAGTTCGACAATCTGA CCAAGGCCGAGAGAGGCGGCCTGAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGCTTCATCAAGAG ACAGCTGGTGGAAACCCGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGATCCTGGACTCCC GGATGAACACTAAGTACGACGAGAATGACAAGCTGATCCGGGAAGTGAAAGTGATC ACCCTGAAGTCCAAGCTGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGTTTTACAAAGTG CGCGAGATCAACAACTACCACCACGCCCACGACGCCTACCTGAACGCCGTCGTGGG AACCGCCCTGATCAAAAAGTACCCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGACT ACAAGGTGTACGACGTGCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGGAAATCGGCAA GGCTACCGCCAAGTACTTCTTCTACAGCAACATCATGAACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGAT TACCCTGGCCAACGGCGAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAAACGGCGAAA CCGGGGAGATCGTGTGGGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGTGCGGAAAGTGCTG AGCATGCCCCAAGTGAATATCGTGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCAG CAAAGAGTCTATCCTGCCCAAGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCCAGAAAGAAGG ACTGGGACCCTAAGAAGTACGGCGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGTGGCCTATTCTGTGC TGGTGGTGGCCAAAGTGGAAAAGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAAGA GCTGCTGGGGATCACCATCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAATCCCATCGACT TTCTGGAAGCCAAGGGCTACAAAGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCT AAGTACTCCCTGTTCGAGCTGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGGCCTCTGCCGG CGAACTGCAGAAGGGAAACGAACTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTGAACTTCCTGT ACCTGGCCAGCCACTATGAGAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAGAAA CAGCTGTTTGTGGAACAGCACAAGCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCGAGCAGATCAG CGAGTTCTCCAAGAGAGTGATCCTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGC CTACAACAAGCACCGGGATAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAATATCATCCACC TGTTTACCCTGACCAATCTGGGAGCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACCA TCGACCGGAAGAGGTACACCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGATCCAC CAGAGCATCACCGGCCTGTACGAGACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCGA CAAAAGGCCGGCGGCCACGAAAAAGGCCGGCCAGGCAAAAAAGAAAAAGtaa 37. Sp_del(175-307)-A(EAAAK)3ALEA(EAAAK)3A (“A(EAAAK)3ALEA(EAAAK)3A” disclosed as SEQ ID NO: 93) (SEQ ID NO: 106) ATGGCCCCAAAGAAGAAGCGGAAGGTCGGTATCCACGGAGTCCCAGCAG CCGACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGACATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGCTGGGCC GTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCAACAC CGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACAGCGGCG AAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACACCAGACG GAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAGGTGG ACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGATAAGAAG CACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACGAGAA GTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAAGGCCG ACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCACTTCC TGATCGAGGGCGACCTGgctGAAGCCGCTGCTAAAGAAGCcGCTGCTAAAGAAGCcGC TGCTAAAGccCTGGAGgctGAAGCcGCTGCTAAAGAAGCcGCTGCTAAAGAAGCCGCT GCTAAAgctGTGAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCCCTGAGCGCCTCTATGATCAAG AGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCTGAAAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGCA GCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAGAGCAAGAACGGCTACGCCG GCTACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTACAAGTTCATCAAGCCCATC CTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGTGAAGCTGAACAGAGAGGACCT GCTGCGGAAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATCCCCCACCAGATCCACCTGG GAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATTTTTACCCATTCCTGAAGGACA ACCGGGAAAAGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCATCCCCTACTACGTGGGCCCTC TGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACCAGAAAGAGCGAGGAAACCAT CACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAAGGGCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCA TCGAGCGGATGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCAACGAGAAGGTGCTGCCCAAG CACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTATAACGAGCTGACCAAAGTGAAATAC GTGACCGAGGGAATGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCGAGCAGAAAAAGGCCA TCGTGGACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTGAAGCAGCTGAAAGAG GACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCTTCGACTCCGTGGAAATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGAT CGGTTCAACGCCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAAAATTATCAAGGACAA GGACTTCCTGGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGACATTCTGGAAGATATCGTGCTGACCC TGACACTGTTTGAGGACAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTGAAAACCTATGCCCAC CTGTTCGACGACAAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGAGATACACCGGCTGGGG CAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGCTGATCAACGGCATCCGGGACAAGCAGTCCGGCAAGACA ATCCTGGATTTCCTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAACTTCATGCAGCTGATC CACGACGACAGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAGAAAGCCCAGGTGTCCGGCCA GGGCGATAGCCTGCACGAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCAGCCCCGCCATTAAGA AGGGCATCCTGCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGTGAAAGTGATGGGCCGG CACAAGCCCGAGAACATCGTGATCGAAATGGCCAGAGAGAACCAGACCACCCAGA AGGGACAGAAGAACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGAAGAGGGCATCAAAGA GCTGGGCAGCCAGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGTGGAAAACACCCAGCTGCAGAACG AGAAGCTGTACCTGTACTACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGGATATGTACGTGGACCAGGAA CTGGACATCAACCGGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACCATATCGTGCCTCAGAGCTTT CTGAAGGACGACTCCATCGACAACAAGGTGCTGACCAGAAGCGACAAGAACCGGG GCAAGAGCGACAACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGAAGATGAAGAACTACTGG CGGCAGCTGCTGAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGAGAAAGTTCGACAATCTGACCAA GGCCGAGAGAGGCGGCCTGAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGCTTCATCAAGAGACAG CTGGTGGAAACCCGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGATCCTGGACTCCCGGAT GAACACTAAGTACGACGAGAATGACAAGCTGATCCGGGAAGTGAAAGTGATCACCC TGAAGTCCAAGCTGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGTTTTACAAAGTGCGCG AGATCAACAACTACCACCACGCCCACGACGCCTACCTGAACGCCGTCGTGGGAACC GCCCTGATCAAAAAGTACCCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGACTACAA GGTGTACGACGTGCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGGAAATCGGCAAGGCT ACCGCCAAGTACTTCTTCTACAGCAACATCATGAACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGATTACC CTGGCCAACGGCGAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAAACGGCGAAACCGG GGAGATCGTGTGGGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGTGCGGAAAGTGCTGAGCA TGCCCCAAGTGAATATCGTGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCAGCAAA GAGTCTATCCTGCCCAAGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCCAGAAAGAAGGACTG GGACCCTAAGAAGTACGGCGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGTGGCCTATTCTGTGCTGGT GGTGGCCAAAGTGGAAAAGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAAGAGCTG CTGGGGATCACCATCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAATCCCATCGACTTTCT GGAAGCCAAGGGCTACAAAGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCTAAGT ACTCCCTGTTCGAGCTGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGGCCTCTGCCGGCGAA CTGCAGAAGGGAAACGAACTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTGAACTTCCTGTACCTG GCCAGCCACTATGAGAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAGAAACAGCT GTTTGTGGAACAGCACAAGCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCGAGCAGATCAGCGAGT TCTCCAAGAGAGTGATCCTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGCCTACA ACAAGCACCGGGATAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAATATCATCCACCTGTTT ACCCTGACCAATCTGGGAGCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACCATCGAC CGGAAGAGGTACACCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGATCCACCAGAG CATCACCGGCCTGTACGAGACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCGACAAAA GGCCGGCGGCCACGAAAAAGGCCGGCCAGGCAAAAAAGAAAAAGtaa 38. Sp_del(175-307)-A(EAAAK)3ALEA(EAAAK)3ALEA(EAAAK)3A (“A(EAAAK)3ALEA(EAAAK)3ALEA(EAAAK)3A” disclosed as SEQ ID NO: 95) (SEQ ID NO: 107) ATGGCCCCAAAGAAGAAGCGGAAGGTCGGTATCCACGGAGTCCCAGCAG CCGACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGACATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGCTGGGCC GTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCAACAC CGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACAGCGGCG AAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACACCAGACG GAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAGGTGG ACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGATAAGAAG CACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACGAGAA GTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAAGGCCG ACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCACTTCC TGATCGAGGGCGACCTGgctGAAGCTGCTGCTAAAGAAGCTGCTGCTAAAGAAGCTG CTGCTAAAGccCTGGAGgctGAAGCTGCTGCTAAAGAAGCTGCTGCTAAAGAAGCTGC TGCTAAAGccCTGGAGgctGAAGCTGCTGCTAAAGAAGCTGCTGCTAAAGAAGCTGCT GCTAAAgctGTGAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCCCTGAGCGCCTCTATGATCAAG AGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCTGAAAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGCA GCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAGAGCAAGAACGGCTACGCCG GCTACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTACAAGTTCATCAAGCCCATC CTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGTGAAGCTGAACAGAGAGGACCT GCTGCGGAAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATCCCCCACCAGATCCACCTGG GAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATTTTTACCCATTCCTGAAGGACA ACCGGGAAAAGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCATCCCCTACTACGTGGGCCCTC TGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACCAGAAAGAGCGAGGAAACCAT CACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAAGGGCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCA TCGAGCGGATGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCAACGAGAAGGTGCTGCCCAAG CACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTATAACGAGCTGACCAAAGTGAAATAC GTGACCGAGGGAATGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCGAGCAGAAAAAGGCCA TCGTGGACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTGAAGCAGCTGAAAGAG GACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCTTCGACTCCGTGGAAATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGAT CGGTTCAACGCCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAAAATTATCAAGGACAA GGACTTCCTGGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGACATTCTGGAAGATATCGTGCTGACCC TGACACTGTTTGAGGACAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTGAAAACCTATGCCCAC CTGTTCGACGACAAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGAGATACACCGGCTGGGG CAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGCTGATCAACGGCATCCGGGACAAGCAGTCCGGCAAGACA ATCCTGGATTTCCTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAACTTCATGCAGCTGATC CACGACGACAGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAGAAAGCCCAGGTGTCCGGCCA GGGCGATAGCCTGCACGAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCAGCCCCGCCATTAAGA AGGGCATCCTGCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGTGAAAGTGATGGGCCGG CACAAGCCCGAGAACATCGTGATCGAAATGGCCAGAGAGAACCAGACCACCCAGA AGGGACAGAAGAACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGAAGAGGGCATCAAAGA GCTGGGCAGCCAGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGTGGAAAACACCCAGCTGCAGAACG AGAAGCTGTACCTGTACTACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGGATATGTACGTGGACCAGGAA CTGGACATCAACCGGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACCATATCGTGCCTCAGAGCTTT CTGAAGGACGACTCCATCGACAACAAGGTGCTGACCAGAAGCGACAAGAACCGGG GCAAGAGCGACAACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGAAGATGAAGAACTACTGG CGGCAGCTGCTGAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGAGAAAGTTCGACAATCTGACCAA GGCCGAGAGAGGCGGCCTGAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGCTTCATCAAGAGACAG CTGGTGGAAACCCGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGATCCTGGACTCCCGGAT GAACACTAAGTACGACGAGAATGACAAGCTGATCCGGGAAGTGAAAGTGATCACCC TGAAGTCCAAGCTGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGTTTTACAAAGTGCGCG AGATCAACAACTACCACCACGCCCACGACGCCTACCTGAACGCCGTCGTGGGAACC GCCCTGATCAAAAAGTACCCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGACTACAA GGTGTACGACGTGCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGGAAATCGGCAAGGCT ACCGCCAAGTACTTCTTCTACAGCAACATCATGAACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGATTACC CTGGCCAACGGCGAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAAACGGCGAAACCGG GGAGATCGTGTGGGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGTGCGGAAAGTGCTGAGCA TGCCCCAAGTGAATATCGTGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCAGCAAA GAGTCTATCCTGCCCAAGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCCAGAAAGAAGGACTG GGACCCTAAGAAGTACGGCGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGTGGCCTATTCTGTGCTGGT GGTGGCCAAAGTGGAAAAGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAAGAGCTG CTGGGGATCACCATCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAATCCCATCGACTTTCT GGAAGCCAAGGGCTACAAAGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCTAAGT ACTCCCTGTTCGAGCTGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGGCCTCTGCCGGCGAA CTGCAGAAGGGAAACGAACTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTGAACTTCCTGTACCTG GCCAGCCACTATGAGAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAGAAACAGCT GTTTGTGGAACAGCACAAGCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCGAGCAGATCAGCGAGT TCTCCAAGAGAGTGATCCTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGCCTACA ACAAGCACCGGGATAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAATATCATCCACCTGTTT ACCCTGACCAATCTGGGAGCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACCATCGAC CGGAAGAGGTACACCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGATCCACCAGAG CATCACCGGCCTGTACGAGACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCGACAAAA GGCCGGCGGCCACGAAAAAGGCCGGCCAGGCAAAAAAGAAAAAGtaa 39. Sp_del(175-307)-A(EAAAK)3ALEA(EAAAK)3ALEA(EAAAK)3ALEA(EAAAK)3A (“A(EAAAK)3ALEA(EAAAK)3ALEA(EAAAK)3ALEA(EAAAK)3A” disclosed as SEQ ID NO: 97) (SEQ ID NO: 108) ATGGCCCCAAAGAAGAAGCGGAAGGTCGGTATCCACGGAGTCCCAGCAG CCGACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGACATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGCTGGGCC GTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCAACAC CGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACAGCGGCG AAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACACCAGACG GAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAGGTGG ACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGATAAGAAG CACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACGAGAA GTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAAGGCCG ACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCACTTCC TGATCGAGGGCGACCTGgctGAAGCTGCTGCTAAAGAAGCTGCTGCTAAAGAAGCTG CTGCTAAAGccCTGGAGgctGAAGCTGCTGCTAAAGAAGCTGCTGCTAAAGAAGCTGC TGCTAAAGccCTGGAGgctGAAGCTGCTGCTAAAGAAGCTGCTGCTAAAGAAGCTGCT GCTAAAGccCTGGAGgctGAAGCTGCTGCTAAAGAAGCTGCTGCTAAAGAAGCTGCTG CTAAAgctGTGAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCCCTGAGCGCCTCTATGATCAAGA GATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCTGAAAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAG CTGCCTGAGAAGTACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAGAGCAAGAACGGCTACGCCGG CTACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTACAAGTTCATCAAGCCCATCC TGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGTGAAGCTGAACAGAGAGGACCT GCTGCGGAAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATCCCCCACCAGATCCACCTGG GAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATTTTTACCCATTCCTGAAGGACA ACCGGGAAAAGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCATCCCCTACTACGTGGGCCCTC TGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACCAGAAAGAGCGAGGAAACCAT CACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAAGGGCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCA TCGAGCGGATGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCAACGAGAAGGTGCTGCCCAAG CACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTATAACGAGCTGACCAAAGTGAAATAC GTGACCGAGGGAATGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCGAGCAGAAAAAGGCCA TCGTGGACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTGAAGCAGCTGAAAGAG GACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCTTCGACTCCGTGGAAATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGAT CGGTTCAACGCCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAAAATTATCAAGGACAA GGACTTCCTGGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGACATTCTGGAAGATATCGTGCTGACCC TGACACTGTTTGAGGACAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTGAAAACCTATGCCCAC CTGTTCGACGACAAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGAGATACACCGGCTGGGG CAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGCTGATCAACGGCATCCGGGACAAGCAGTCCGGCAAGACA ATCCTGGATTTCCTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAACTTCATGCAGCTGATC CACGACGACAGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAGAAAGCCCAGGTGTCCGGCCA GGGCGATAGCCTGCACGAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCAGCCCCGCCATTAAGA AGGGCATCCTGCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGTGAAAGTGATGGGCCGG CACAAGCCCGAGAACATCGTGATCGAAATGGCCAGAGAGAACCAGACCACCCAGA AGGGACAGAAGAACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGAAGAGGGCATCAAAGA GCTGGGCAGCCAGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGTGGAAAACACCCAGCTGCAGAACG AGAAGCTGTACCTGTACTACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGGATATGTACGTGGACCAGGAA CTGGACATCAACCGGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACCATATCGTGCCTCAGAGCTTT CTGAAGGACGACTCCATCGACAACAAGGTGCTGACCAGAAGCGACAAGAACCGGG GCAAGAGCGACAACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGAAGATGAAGAACTACTGG CGGCAGCTGCTGAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGAGAAAGTTCGACAATCTGACCAA GGCCGAGAGAGGCGGCCTGAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGCTTCATCAAGAGACAG CTGGTGGAAACCCGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGATCCTGGACTCCCGGAT GAACACTAAGTACGACGAGAATGACAAGCTGATCCGGGAAGTGAAAGTGATCACCC TGAAGTCCAAGCTGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGTTTTACAAAGTGCGCG AGATCAACAACTACCACCACGCCCACGACGCCTACCTGAACGCCGTCGTGGGAACC GCCCTGATCAAAAAGTACCCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGACTACAA GGTGTACGACGTGCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGGAAATCGGCAAGGCT ACCGCCAAGTACTTCTTCTACAGCAACATCATGAACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGATTACC CTGGCCAACGGCGAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAAACGGCGAAACCGG GGAGATCGTGTGGGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGTGCGGAAAGTGCTGAGCA TGCCCCAAGTGAATATCGTGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCAGCAAA GAGTCTATCCTGCCCAAGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCCAGAAAGAAGGACTG GGACCCTAAGAAGTACGGCGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGTGGCCTATTCTGTGCTGGT GGTGGCCAAAGTGGAAAAGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAAGAGCTG CTGGGGATCACCATCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAATCCCATCGACTTTCT GGAAGCCAAGGGCTACAAAGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCTAAGT ACTCCCTGTTCGAGCTGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGGCCTCTGCCGGCGAA CTGCAGAAGGGAAACGAACTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTGAACTTCCTGTACCTG GCCAGCCACTATGAGAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAGAAACAGCT GTTTGTGGAACAGCACAAGCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCGAGCAGATCAGCGAGT TCTCCAAGAGAGTGATCCTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGCCTACA ACAAGCACCGGGATAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAATATCATCCACCTGTTT ACCCTGACCAATCTGGGAGCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACCATCGAC CGGAAGAGGTACACCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGATCCACCAGAG CATCACCGGCCTGTACGAGACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCGACAAAA GGCCGGCGGCCACGAAAAAGGCCGGCCAGGCAAAAAAGAAAAAGtaa

Example 10: New Nickases

FIGS. 24A-C pertain to new SpCas9 nickases and provide A. Schematic showing catalytic domains of SpCas9, and sites of mutagenesis for putative new nickases. RuvC domains I, II, and III are shown in orange, HNH domain in white between RuvCII and RuvCIII. Domain sizes not drawn to scale. B. Schematic showing locations of sgRNAs used for testing double nicking: when sgRNAs are transfected singly (A1 or C1 alone) with SpCas9 nickases, no indels should result. The combination of A1+C1, used in combination with RuvCIII mutation nickases result in 5′-overhang, where as D1+A1 and C7+A1 would result in 3′-overhangs. Conversely, those three combinations used with HNH mutation nickases would result in 3′-, 5′-, and 5′-overhangs, respectively. C. Surveyor test showing 1 HNH mutant that retains nuclease activity (N854A), and 1 HNH mutant that shows nickase activity (N863A), as well as 2 RuvCIII mutants that show nickase activity (H983A, D986A).

In this Example, five potential nicking mutation sites were chosen based on sequence homology between Cas9 orthologs. And three additional sites were chosen based on herein crystallography data. A subset of these sets of nickase mutant Cas9s were re-cloned to incorporate both N′ and C′-NLS sequences that are identical to those of optimized SpCas9. Sequences are below.

Nickase mutants were re-cloned to incorporated designated mutations into pAAV-vector under Cbh promoter and sequence validated.

Nuclease and double-nicking activities for all potential nickases were tested in HEK 293FT cells as follows: co-transfection of 400 ng of nickase and 100 ng of U6-driven sgRNA (100 ng for one guide, or 50 ng each for a pair of sgRNAs) by Lipofectamine 2000 into ˜200,000 cells. DNAs from transfected cells were collected for SURVEYOR analysis. Nickases do not result in indel mutations when co-transfected with a single sgRNA, but do when co-transfected with a pair of appropriately off-set sgRNAs. Based on data from the original D10A SpCas9 nickase, the pair of sgRNA chosen (A1/C1) for RuvC domain mutants have 0-bp offset and 5′-overhang for maximal cleavage.

Mutant domain Functional? Homology set: Cbh-hSpCas9(D10A)-NLS RuvCI nickase activity Cbh-hSpCas9(E762A)-NLS RuvCII Cbh-hSpCas9(H840A)-NLS HNH no activity Cbh-hSpCas9(N854A)-NLS HNH wt nuclease activity Cbh-hSpCas9(N863A)-NLS HNH nickase activity Cbh-hSpCas9(D986A)-NLS RuvCIII Crystal set set: NLS-S15A-NLS RuvCI wt nuclease activity NLS-E762A-NLS RuvCII catalytically dead NLS-H982A-NLS RuvCIII wt nuclease activity NLS-H983A-NLS RuvCIII nickase activity NLS-D986A-NLS RuvCIII nickase activity

>NLS-S15A-NLS (SEQ ID NO: 109) ATGGCCCCAAAGAAGAAGCGGAAGGTCGGTATCCACGGAGTCCCAGCAG CCGACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGACATCGGCACCAACgccGTGGGCTGGGCCG TGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCAACACC GACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACAGCGGCGA AACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACACCAGACGG AAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAGGTGGA CGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGATAAGAAGC ACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACGAGAAG TACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAAGGCCGA CCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCACTTCCT GATCGAGGGCGACCTGAACCCCGACAACAGCGACGTGGACAAGCTGTTCATCCAGC TGGTGCAGACCTACAACCAGCTGTTCGAGGAAAACCCCATCAACGCCAGCGGCGTG GACGCCAAGGCCATCCTGTCTGCCAGACTGAGCAAGAGCAGACGGCTGGAAAATCT GATCGCCCAGCTGCCCGGCGAGAAGAAGAATGGCCTGTTCGGAAACCTGATTGCCC TGAGCCTGGGCCTGACCCCCAACTTCAAGAGCAACTTCGACCTGGCCGAGGATGCC AAACTGCAGCTGAGCAAGGACACCTACGACGACGACCTGGACAACCTGCTGGCCCA GATCGGCGACCAGTACGCCGACCTGTTTCTGGCCGCCAAGAACCTGTCCGACGCCAT CCTGCTGAGCGACATCCTGAGAGTGAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCCCTGAGCG CCTCTATGATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCTGAAAGCT CTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAGAGCAA GAACGGCTACGCCGGCTACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTACAAGT TCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGTGAAGCTG AACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATCCCCCA CCAGATCCACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATTTTTACCC ATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCATCCCCT ACTACGTGGGCCCTCTGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACCAGAAAG AGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAAGGGCGCTTC CGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGATGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCAACGAGA AGGTGCTGCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTATAACGAGCTGA CCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAATGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCGAG CAGAAAAAGGCCATCGTGGACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTGAA GCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCTTCGACTCCGTGGAAATCT CCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCAACGCCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAAA ATTATCAAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGACATTCTGGAAGA TATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGAGGACAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTGA AAACCTATGCCCACCTGTTCGACGACAAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGAGA TACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGCTGATCAACGGCATCCGGGACAAGCA GTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGATTTCCTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAACTT CATGCAGCTGATCCACGACGACAGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAGAAAGCCC AGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCTGCACGAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCAGC CCCGCCATTAAGAAGGGCATCCTGCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGTGAA AGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCCGAGAACATCGTGATCGAAATGGCCAGAGAGAAC CAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAGAAGAACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGAAG AGGGCATCAAAGAGCTGGGCAGCCAGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGTGGAAAACAC CCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAAGCTGTACCTGTACTACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGGATATGT ACGTGGACCAGGAACTGGACATCAACCGGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACCATATC GTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAAGGACGACTCCATCGACAACAAGGTGCTGACCAGAAG CGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAGAGCGACAACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGAAG ATGAAGAACTACTGGCGGCAGCTGCTGAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGAGAAAGTT CGACAATCTGACCAAGGCCGAGAGAGGCGGCCTGAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGCT TCATCAAGAGACAGCTGGTGGAAACCCGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGATC CTGGACTCCCGGATGAACACTAAGTACGACGAGAATGACAAGCTGATCCGGGAAGT GAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCAAGCTGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGTT TTACAAAGTGCGCGAGATCAACAACTACCACCACGCCCACGACGCCTACCTGAACG CCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATCAAAAAGTACCCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGTG TACGGCGACTACAAGGTGTACGACGTGCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGGA AATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCCAAGTACTTCTTCTACAGCAACATCATGAACTTTTTCAA GACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCAACGGCGAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAA ACGGCGAAACCGGGGAGATCGTGTGGGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGTGCGG AAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAAGTGAATATCGTGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAGG CGGCTTCAGCAAAGAGTCTATCCTGCCCAAGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCCA GAAAGAAGGACTGGGACCCTAAGAAGTACGGCGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGTGGCC TATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGCCAAAGTGGAAAAGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAG TGTGAAAGAGCTGCTGGGGATCACCATCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAATC CCATCGACTTTCTGGAAGCCAAGGGCTACAAAGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATC AAGCTGCCTAAGTACTCCCTGTTCGAGCTGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGGC CTCTGCCGGCGAACTGCAGAAGGGAAACGAACTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTGA ACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGCCACTATGAGAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAAT GAGCAGAAACAGCTGTTTGTGGAACAGCACAAGCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCGA GCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAGAGAGTGATCCTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAG TGCTGTCCGCCTACAACAAGCACCGGGATAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAAT ATCATCCACCTGTTTACCCTGACCAATCTGGGAGCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTG ACACCACCATCGACCGGAAGAGGTACACCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACC CTGATCCACCAGAGCATCACCGGCCTGTACGAGACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCTG GGAGGCGACAAAAGGCCGGCGGCCACGAAAAAGGCCGGCCAGGCAAAAAAGAAA AAGtaa  >NLS-E762A-NLS (SEQ ID NO: 110) ATGGCCCCAAAGAAGAAGCGGAAGGTCGGTATCCACGGAGTCCCAGCAG CCGACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGACATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGCTGGGCC GTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCAACAC CGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACAGCGGCG AAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACACCAGACG GAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAGGTGG ACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGATAAGAAG CACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACGAGAA GTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAAGGCCG ACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCACTTCC TGATCGAGGGCGACCTGAACCCCGACAACAGCGACGTGGACAAGCTGTTCATCCAG CTGGTGCAGACCTACAACCAGCTGTTCGAGGAAAACCCCATCAACGCCAGCGGCGT GGACGCCAAGGCCATCCTGTCTGCCAGACTGAGCAAGAGCAGACGGCTGGAAAATC TGATCGCCCAGCTGCCCGGCGAGAAGAAGAATGGCCTGTTCGGAAACCTGATTGCC CTGAGCCTGGGCCTGACCCCCAACTTCAAGAGCAACTTCGACCTGGCCGAGGATGC CAAACTGCAGCTGAGCAAGGACACCTACGACGACGACCTGGACAACCTGCTGGCCC AGATCGGCGACCAGTACGCCGACCTGTTTCTGGCCGCCAAGAACCTGTCCGACGCC ATCCTGCTGAGCGACATCCTGAGAGTGAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCCCTGAG CGCCTCTATGATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCTGAAAG CTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAGAGCA AGAACGGCTACGCCGGCTACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTACAAG TTCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGTGAAGCT GAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATCCCCC ACCAGATCCACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATTTTTAC CCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCATCCC CTACTACGTGGGCCCTCTGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACCAGAA AGAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAAGGGCGCT TCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGATGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCAACGA GAAGGTGCTGCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTATAACGAGCT GACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAATGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCG AGCAGAAAAAGGCCATCGTGGACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTG AAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCTTCGACTCCGTGGAAAT CTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCAACGCCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAA AATTATCAAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGACATTCTGGAAG ATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGAGGACAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTG AAAACCTATGCCCACCTGTTCGACGACAAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGAG ATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGCTGATCAACGGCATCCGGGACAAGC AGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGATTTCCTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAAC TTCATGCAGCTGATCCACGACGACAGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAGAAAGC CCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCTGCACGAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCA GCCCCGCCATTAAGAAGGGCATCCTGCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGTG AAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCCGAGAACATCGTGATCGccATGGCCAGAGAGAA CCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAGAAGAACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGAA GAGGGCATCAAAGAGCTGGGCAGCCAGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGTGGAAAACA CCCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAAGCTGTACCTGTACTACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGGATATG TACGTGGACCAGGAACTGGACATCAACCGGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACCATAT CGTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAAGGACGACTCCATCGACAACAAGGTGCTGACCAGAA GCGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAGAGCGACAACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGAA GATGAAGAACTACTGGCGGCAGCTGCTGAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGAGAAAGT TCGACAATCTGACCAAGGCCGAGAGAGGCGGCCTGAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGC TTCATCAAGAGACAGCTGGTGGAAACCCGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGAT CCTGGACTCCCGGATGAACACTAAGTACGACGAGAATGACAAGCTGATCCGGGAAG TGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCAAGCTGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGT TTTACAAAGTGCGCGAGATCAACAACTACCACCACGCCCACGACGCCTACCTGAAC GCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATCAAAAAGTACCCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGT GTACGGCGACTACAAGGTGTACGACGTGCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGG AAATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCCAAGTACTTCTTCTACAGCAACATCATGAACTTTTTCA AGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCAACGGCGAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACA AACGGCGAAACCGGGGAGATCGTGTGGGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGTGCG GAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAAGTGAATATCGTGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAG GCGGCTTCAGCAAAGAGTCTATCCTGCCCAAGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCC AGAAAGAAGGACTGGGACCCTAAGAAGTACGGCGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGTGGC CTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGCCAAAGTGGAAAAGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGA GTGTGAAAGAGCTGCTGGGGATCACCATCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAAT CCCATCGACTTTCTGGAAGCCAAGGGCTACAAAGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCAT CAAGCTGCCTAAGTACTCCCTGTTCGAGCTGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGG CCTCTGCCGGCGAACTGCAGAAGGGAAACGAACTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTG AACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGCCACTATGAGAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAA TGAGCAGAAACAGCTGTTTGTGGAACAGCACAAGCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCG AGCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAGAGAGTGATCCTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAA GTGCTGTCCGCCTACAACAAGCACCGGGATAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAA TATCATCCACCTGTTTACCCTGACCAATCTGGGAGCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTT GACACCACCATCGACCGGAAGAGGTACACCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCAC CCTGATCCACCAGAGCATCACCGGCCTGTACGAGACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCT GGGAGGCGACAAAAGGCCGGCGGCCACGAAAAAGGCCGGCCAGGCAAAAAAGAA AAAGtaa  >NLS-H982A-NLS (SEQ ID NO: 111) ATGGCCCCAAAGAAGAAGCGGAAGGTCGGTATCCACGGAGTCCCAGCAG CCGACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGACATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGCTGGGCC GTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCAACAC CGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACAGCGGCG AAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACACCAGACG GAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAGGTGG ACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGATAAGAAG CACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACGAGAA GTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAAGGCCG ACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCACTTCC TGATCGAGGGCGACCTGAACCCCGACAACAGCGACGTGGACAAGCTGTTCATCCAG CTGGTGCAGACCTACAACCAGCTGTTCGAGGAAAACCCCATCAACGCCAGCGGCGT GGACGCCAAGGCCATCCTGTCTGCCAGACTGAGCAAGAGCAGACGGCTGGAAAATC TGATCGCCCAGCTGCCCGGCGAGAAGAAGAATGGCCTGTTCGGAAACCTGATTGCC CTGAGCCTGGGCCTGACCCCCAACTTCAAGAGCAACTTCGACCTGGCCGAGGATGC CAAACTGCAGCTGAGCAAGGACACCTACGACGACGACCTGGACAACCTGCTGGCCC AGATCGGCGACCAGTACGCCGACCTGTTTCTGGCCGCCAAGAACCTGTCCGACGCC ATCCTGCTGAGCGACATCCTGAGAGTGAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCCCTGAG CGCCTCTATGATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCTGAAAG CTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAGAGCA AGAACGGCTACGCCGGCTACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTACAAG TTCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGTGAAGCT GAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATCCCCC ACCAGATCCACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATTTTTAC CCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCATCCC CTACTACGTGGGCCCTCTGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACCAGAA AGAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAAGGGCGCT TCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGATGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCAACGA GAAGGTGCTGCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTATAACGAGCT GACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAATGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCG AGCAGAAAAAGGCCATCGTGGACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTG AAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCTTCGACTCCGTGGAAAT CTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCAACGCCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAA AATTATCAAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGACATTCTGGAAG ATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGAGGACAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTG AAAACCTATGCCCACCTGTTCGACGACAAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGAG ATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGCTGATCAACGGCATCCGGGACAAGC AGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGATTTCCTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAAC TTCATGCAGCTGATCCACGACGACAGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAGAAAGC CCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCTGCACGAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCA GCCCCGCCATTAAGAAGGGCATCCTGCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGTG AAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCCGAGAACATCGTGATCGAAATGGCCAGAGAGA ACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAGAAGAACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGA AGAGGGCATCAAAGAGCTGGGCAGCCAGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGTGGAAAAC ACCCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAAGCTGTACCTGTACTACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGGATAT GTACGTGGACCAGGAACTGGACATCAACCGGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACCATA TCGTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAAGGACGACTCCATCGACAACAAGGTGCTGACCAGA AGCGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAGAGCGACAACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGA AGATGAAGAACTACTGGCGGCAGCTGCTGAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGAGAAAG TTCGACAATCTGACCAAGGCCGAGAGAGGCGGCCTGAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGG CTTCATCAAGAGACAGCTGGTGGAAACCCGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGA TCCTGGACTCCCGGATGAACACTAAGTACGACGAGAATGACAAGCTGATCCGGGAA GTGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCAAGCTGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAG TTTTACAAAGTGCGCGAGATCAACAACTACgccCACGCCCACGACGCCTACCTGAAC GCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATCAAAAAGTACCCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGT GTACGGCGACTACAAGGTGTACGACGTGCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGG AAATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCCAAGTACTTCTTCTACAGCAACATCATGAACTTTTTCA AGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCAACGGCGAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACA AACGGCGAAACCGGGGAGATCGTGTGGGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGTGCG GAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAAGTGAATATCGTGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAG GCGGCTTCAGCAAAGAGTCTATCCTGCCCAAGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCC AGAAAGAAGGACTGGGACCCTAAGAAGTACGGCGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGTGGC CTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGCCAAAGTGGAAAAGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGA GTGTGAAAGAGCTGCTGGGGATCACCATCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAAT CCCATCGACTTTCTGGAAGCCAAGGGCTACAAAGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCAT CAAGCTGCCTAAGTACTCCCTGTTCGAGCTGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGG CCTCTGCCGGCGAACTGCAGAAGGGAAACGAACTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTG AACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGCCACTATGAGAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAA TGAGCAGAAACAGCTGTTTGTGGAACAGCACAAGCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCG AGCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAGAGAGTGATCCTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAA GTGCTGTCCGCCTACAACAAGCACCGGGATAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAA TATCATCCACCTGTTTACCCTGACCAATCTGGGAGCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTT GACACCACCATCGACCGGAAGAGGTACACCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCAC CCTGATCCACCAGAGCATCACCGGCCTGTACGAGACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCT GGGAGGCGACAAAAGGCCGGCGGCCACGAAAAAGGCCGGCCAGGCAAAAAAGAA AAAGtaa  >NLS-H983A-NLS (SEQ ID NO: 112) ATGGCCCCAAAGAAGAAGCGGAAGGTCGGTATCCACGGAGTCCCAGCAG CCGACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGACATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGCTGGGCC GTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCAACAC CGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACAGCGGCG AAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACACCAGACG GAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAGGTGG ACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGATAAGAAG CACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACGAGAA GTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAAGGCCG ACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCACTTCC TGATCGAGGGCGACCTGAACCCCGACAACAGCGACGTGGACAAGCTGTTCATCCAG CTGGTGCAGACCTACAACCAGCTGTTCGAGGAAAACCCCATCAACGCCAGCGGCGT GGACGCCAAGGCCATCCTGTCTGCCAGACTGAGCAAGAGCAGACGGCTGGAAAATC TGATCGCCCAGCTGCCCGGCGAGAAGAAGAATGGCCTGTTCGGAAACCTGATTGCC CTGAGCCTGGGCCTGACCCCCAACTTCAAGAGCAACTTCGACCTGGCCGAGGATGC CAAACTGCAGCTGAGCAAGGACACCTACGACGACGACCTGGACAACCTGCTGGCCC AGATCGGCGACCAGTACGCCGACCTGTTTCTGGCCGCCAAGAACCTGTCCGACGCC ATCCTGCTGAGCGACATCCTGAGAGTGAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCCCTGAG CGCCTCTATGATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCTGAAAG CTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAGAGCA AGAACGGCTACGCCGGCTACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTACAAG TTCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGTGAAGCT GAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATCCCCC ACCAGATCCACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATTTTTAC CCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCATCCC CTACTACGTGGGCCCTCTGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACCAGAA AGAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAAGGGCGCT TCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGATGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCAACGA GAAGGTGCTGCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTATAACGAGCT GACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAATGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCG AGCAGAAAAAGGCCATCGTGGACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTG AAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCTTCGACTCCGTGGAAAT CTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCAACGCCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAA AATTATCAAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGACATTCTGGAAG ATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGAGGACAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTG AAAACCTATGCCCACCTGTTCGACGACAAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGAG ATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGCTGATCAACGGCATCCGGGACAAGC AGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGATTTCCTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAAC TTCATGCAGCTGATCCACGACGACAGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAGAAAGC CCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCTGCACGAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCA GCCCCGCCATTAAGAAGGGCATCCTGCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGTG AAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCCGAGAACATCGTGATCGAAATGGCCAGAGAGA ACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAGAAGAACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGA AGAGGGCATCAAAGAGCTGGGCAGCCAGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGTGGAAAAC ACCCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAAGCTGTACCTGTACTACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGGATAT GTACGTGGACCAGGAACTGGACATCAACCGGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACCATA TCGTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAAGGACGACTCCATCGACAACAAGGTGCTGACCAGA AGCGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAGAGCGACAACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGA AGATGAAGAACTACTGGCGGCAGCTGCTGAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGAGAAAG TTCGACAATCTGACCAAGGCCGAGAGAGGCGGCCTGAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGG CTTCATCAAGAGACAGCTGGTGGAAACCCGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGA TCCTGGACTCCCGGATGAACACTAAGTACGACGAGAATGACAAGCTGATCCGGGAA GTGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCAAGCTGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAG TTTTACAAAGTGCGCGAGATCAACAACTACCACgccGCCCACGACGCCTACCTGAAC GCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATCAAAAAGTACCCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGT GTACGGCGACTACAAGGTGTACGACGTGCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGG AAATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCCAAGTACTTCTTCTACAGCAACATCATGAACTTTTTCA AGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCAACGGCGAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACA AACGGCGAAACCGGGGAGATCGTGTGGGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGTGCG GAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAAGTGAATATCGTGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAG GCGGCTTCAGCAAAGAGTCTATCCTGCCCAAGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCC AGAAAGAAGGACTGGGACCCTAAGAAGTACGGCGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGTGGC CTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGCCAAAGTGGAAAAGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGA GTGTGAAAGAGCTGCTGGGGATCACCATCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAAT CCCATCGACTTTCTGGAAGCCAAGGGCTACAAAGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCAT CAAGCTGCCTAAGTACTCCCTGTTCGAGCTGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGG CCTCTGCCGGCGAACTGCAGAAGGGAAACGAACTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTG AACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGCCACTATGAGAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAA TGAGCAGAAACAGCTGTTTGTGGAACAGCACAAGCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCG AGCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAGAGAGTGATCCTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAA GTGCTGTCCGCCTACAACAAGCACCGGGATAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAA TATCATCCACCTGTTTACCCTGACCAATCTGGGAGCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTT GACACCACCATCGACCGGAAGAGGTACACCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCAC CCTGATCCACCAGAGCATCACCGGCCTGTACGAGACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCT GGGAGGCGACAAAAGGCCGGCGGCCACGAAAAAGGCCGGCCAGGCAAAAAAGAA AAAGtaa  >NLS-D986A-NLS (SEQ ID NO: 113) ATGGCCCCAAAGAAGAAGCGGAAGGTCGGTATCCACGGAGTCCCAGCAG CCGACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGACATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGCTGGGCC GTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCAACAC CGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACAGCGGCG AAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACACCAGACG GAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAGGTGG ACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGATAAGAAG CACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACGAGAA GTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAAGGCCG ACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCACTTCC TGATCGAGGGCGACCTGAACCCCGACAACAGCGACGTGGACAAGCTGTTCATCCAG CTGGTGCAGACCTACAACCAGCTGTTCGAGGAAAACCCCATCAACGCCAGCGGCGT GGACGCCAAGGCCATCCTGTCTGCCAGACTGAGCAAGAGCAGACGGCTGGAAAATC TGATCGCCCAGCTGCCCGGCGAGAAGAAGAATGGCCTGTTCGGAAACCTGATTGCC CTGAGCCTGGGCCTGACCCCCAACTTCAAGAGCAACTTCGACCTGGCCGAGGATGC CAAACTGCAGCTGAGCAAGGACACCTACGACGACGACCTGGACAACCTGCTGGCCC AGATCGGCGACCAGTACGCCGACCTGTTTCTGGCCGCCAAGAACCTGTCCGACGCC ATCCTGCTGAGCGACATCCTGAGAGTGAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCCCTGAG CGCCTCTATGATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCTGAAAG CTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAGAGCA AGAACGGCTACGCCGGCTACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTACAAG TTCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGTGAAGCT GAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATCCCCC ACCAGATCCACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATTTTTAC CCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCATCCC CTACTACGTGGGCCCTCTGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACCAGAA AGAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAAGGGCGCT TCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGATGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCAACGA GAAGGTGCTGCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTATAACGAGCT GACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAATGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCG AGCAGAAAAAGGCCATCGTGGACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTG AAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCTTCGACTCCGTGGAAAT CTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCAACGCCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAA AATTATCAAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGACATTCTGGAAG ATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGAGGACAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTG AAAACCTATGCCCACCTGTTCGACGACAAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGAG ATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGCTGATCAACGGCATCCGGGACAAGC AGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGATTTCCTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAAC TTCATGCAGCTGATCCACGACGACAGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAGAAAGC CCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCTGCACGAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCA GCCCCGCCATTAAGAAGGGCATCCTGCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGTG AAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCCGAGAACATCGTGATCGAAATGGCCAGAGAGA ACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAGAAGAACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGA AGAGGGCATCAAAGAGCTGGGCAGCCAGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGTGGAAAAC ACCCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAAGCTGTACCTGTACTACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGGATAT GTACGTGGACCAGGAACTGGACATCAACCGGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACCATA TCGTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAAGGACGACTCCATCGACAACAAGGTGCTGACCAGA AGCGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAGAGCGACAACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGA AGATGAAGAACTACTGGCGGCAGCTGCTGAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGAGAAAG TTCGACAATCTGACCAAGGCCGAGAGAGGCGGCCTGAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGG CTTCATCAAGAGACAGCTGGTGGAAACCCGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGA TCCTGGACTCCCGGATGAACACTAAGTACGACGAGAATGACAAGCTGATCCGGGAA GTGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCAAGCTGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAG TTTTACAAAGTGCGCGAGATCAACAACTACCACCACGCCCACGcCGCCTACCTGAAC GCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATCAAAAAGTACCCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGT GTACGGCGACTACAAGGTGTACGACGTGCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGG AAATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCCAAGTACTTCTTCTACAGCAACATCATGAACTTTTTCA AGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCAACGGCGAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACA AACGGCGAAACCGGGGAGATCGTGTGGGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGTGCG GAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAAGTGAATATCGTGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAG GCGGCTTCAGCAAAGAGTCTATCCTGCCCAAGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCC AGAAAGAAGGACTGGGACCCTAAGAAGTACGGCGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGTGGC CTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGCCAAAGTGGAAAAGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGA GTGTGAAAGAGCTGCTGGGGATCACCATCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAAT CCCATCGACTTTCTGGAAGCCAAGGGCTACAAAGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCAT CAAGCTGCCTAAGTACTCCCTGTTCGAGCTGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGG CCTCTGCCGGCGAACTGCAGAAGGGAAACGAACTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTG AACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGCCACTATGAGAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAA TGAGCAGAAACAGCTGTTTGTGGAACAGCACAAGCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCG AGCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAGAGAGTGATCCTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAA GTGCTGTCCGCCTACAACAAGCACCGGGATAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAA TATCATCCACCTGTTTACCCTGACCAATCTGGGAGCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTT GACACCACCATCGACCGGAAGAGGTACACCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCAC CCTGATCCACCAGAGCATCACCGGCCTGTACGAGACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCT GGGAGGCGACAAAAGGCCGGCGGCCACGAAAAAGGCCGGCCAGGCAAAAAAGAA AAAG 

Example 11: Truncating and Creating Chimeric Cas9s Based on S. pyogenes Cas9 Crystral Structure Herein

FIGS. 27A-C pertain to truncating and creating chimeric Cas9s based on the herein crystal structure. These figures provide schematics illustrating A. SpCas9 mutants designed for mapping out essential functional domains of Cas9 for truncation of protein. B. chimeric Cas9s that contain sequences (regions in pink) from Cas9 from S. thermophilus CRISPR 1, S. thermophilus CRISPR 3, Staphylococcus aureus, Neisseria meningiditis, or other Cas9 orthologs. C. Designs for creating chemically inducible dimerization of SpCas9. The chemically inducible SpCas9 functions.

DNA sequences for chimeric Cas9s are optimized for human expression by GenScript and synthesized de novo. Chimeric Cas9 proteins can be constructed by cloning and ligating individual functional domains from Cas9 orthologs (i.e. by PCR-amplifying individual functional domains from a desired Cas9 ortholog, then assembling the pieces together by either Gibson or Golden Gate-cloning). Additionally, a set of chemically-inducible Cas9s were constructed as two-component systems, where one portion of the Cas9 protein is fused to FKBP, and the remainder fused to FRB (e.g. FKBP-Cas9(amino acids 1-1098), FRB-Cas(1099-1368)). In absence of chemical induction, co-transfection of the two inducible Cas9 components have no catalytic activity, but the functional assembly of the components may be induced using Rapamycin [5 nM to 10 μM].

Example 12: Crystal Structure of Cas9 in Complex with Guide RNA and Target DNA

Cas9 is an RNA-guided nuclease from the microbial CRISPR-Cas system that can be targeted to specific genomic loci by single guide RNAs (sgRNAs). Applicants report the crystal structure of Streptococcus pyogenes Cas9 in complex with sgRNA and its target DNA at 2.4 Å resolution. The structure revealed a bilobed architecture composed of target recognition and nuclease lobes, accommodating a sgRNA:DNA duplex in a positively-charged groove at their interface. Whereas the recognition lobe is essential for sgRNA and DNA binding, the nuclease lobe contains the HNH and RuvC nuclease domains, which are properly positioned for the cleavage of complementary and non-complementary strands of the target DNA, respectively. This high-resolution structure and accompanying functional analyses elucidate the molecular mechanism of RNA-guided DNA targeting by Cas9, paving the way for rational design of new and versatile genome-editing technologies.

The CRISPR (clustered regularly interspaced palindromic repeat)-Cas system is a naturally occurring microbial adaptive immune system for defense against invading phages and other mobile genetic elements (Deveau et al., 2010; Horvath and Barrangou, 2010; Marraffini and Sontheimer, 2010; Terns and Terns, 2011). Three types (I-III) of CRISPR-Cas systems have been functionally identified across a wide range of microbial species (Barrangou et al., 2007; Brouns et al., 2008; Marraffini and Sontheimer, 2008), each containing a cluster of CRISPR-associated (Cas) genes and its corresponding CRISPR array. These characteristic CRISPR arrays consist of repetitive sequences (direct repeats, referred to as repeats) interspaced by short stretches of non-repetitive sequences (spacers) derived from short segments of foreign genetic material (protospacers). The CRISPR array is transcribed and processed into short CRISPR RNAs (crRNAs), which direct Cas proteins to the target nucleic acids, DNA or RNA, via Watson-Crick base pairing to facilitate the nucleic acid destruction.

Type I and III CRISPR systems utilize ensembles of Cas proteins in complex with crRNA to mediate recognition and subsequent degradation of target nucleic acids (Spilman et al., 2013; Wiedenheft et al., 2011). In contrast, the Type II CRISPR system achieves recognition and cleavage of the target DNA (Garneau et al., 2010) via a single enzyme called Cas9 (Sapranauskas et al., 2011) along with two non-coding RNAs, the crRNA and a trans-activating crRNA (tracrRNA) (Deltcheva et al., 2011). The crRNA hybridizes with the tracrRNA to form a crRNA:tracrRNA duplex, which is then loaded onto Cas9 to direct cleavage of cognate DNA sequences bearing appropriate protospacer adjacent motifs (PAM) (Mojica et al., 2009).

The Type II CRISPR system was the first to be adapted for facilitating genome editing in eukaryotic cells (Cong et al., 2013; Mali et al., 2013b). The Cas9 protein from Streptococcus pyogenes, along with a single guide RNA (sgRNA), a synthetic fusion of crRNA and minimal tracrRNA (Jinek et al., 2012), could be programmed to instruct cleavage of virtually any sequence preceding a 5′-NGG PAM sequence in mammalian cells (Cong et al., 2013; Mali et al., 2013b). This unprecedented flexibility has enabled a broad range of applications including rapid generation of genetically modified cells and animal models (Gratz et al., 2013; Hwang et al., 2013; Wang et al., 2013; Yang et al., 2013), and genome-scale genetic screening (Qi et al., 2013; Shalem et al., 2014; Wang et al., 2014).

However, despite brisk progress in the development of the Cas9 technology, the mechanism of how the Cas9-sgRNA complex recognizes and cleaves its target DNA remains to be elucidated. Up to date, biochemical analyses at the domain levels have enabled site-specific engineering to convert the native Cas9 into a DNA nicking enzyme (Gasiunas et al., 2012; Jinek et al., 2012; Sapranauskas et al., 2011) that facilitates homology-directed repair in eukaryotic cells (Cong et al., 2013; Mali et al., 2013b) and further cleaves DNA with improved specificity given appropriately paired sgRNAs (Mali et al., 2013a; Ran et al., 2013). Moreover, a catalytically inactive Cas9 can serve as a RNA-guided DNA-binding platform to target effector domains and modulate endogenous transcription (Gilbert et al., 2013; Konermann et al., 2013; Maeder et al., 2013; Perez-Pinera et al., 2013; Qi et al., 2013). These Cas9 engineering advances represent just the first steps of what is possible in fully realizing the potential of this flexible RNA-guided genome positioning system. A precise structural information on Cas9 will thus not only enhance the understanding of how this elegant RNA-guided microbial adaptive immune system functions, but also inform further improvements of Cas9 targeting specificity, simplification of in vitro and in vivo delivery, and engineering of Cas9 for novel functions and optimized features.

In this example, Applicants report the crystal structure of S. pyogenes Cas9 in complex with sgRNA and its target DNA at 2.4 Å resolution. This high-resolution structure along with functional analysis reveals the key functional interactions that integrate the guide RNA, target DNA, and Cas9 protein, paving the way towards enhancing Cas9 function as well as engineering novel applications.

Overall structure of the Cas9-sgRNA-DNA ternary complex: Applicants solved the crystal structure of full-length S. pyogenes Cas9 (residues 1-1368; D10A/C80L/C574E/H840A) in complex with a 98-nucleotide (nt) sgRNA and a 23-nt target DNA, at 2.4 Å resolution, by the SAD (single-wavelength anomalous dispersion) method using a SeMet-labeled protein (FIGS. 1, 37 and Table 1). To improve the solution behavior of Cas9, Applicants replaced two less conserved cysteine residues (Cys80 and Cys574) with leucine and glutamic acid, respectively. This C80L/C574E mutant retained the ability to efficiently cleave genomic DNA in human embryonic kidney 293FT (HEK293FT) cells, confirming that these mutations have no effects on Cas9 nuclease function (FIG. 38 ). Additionally, to prevent cleavage of the target DNA during crystallization, Applicants replaced the two catalytic residues, Asp10 from the RuvC domain and His840 from the HNH domain, with alanine.

TABLE 1 Data collection and refinement statistics Native Cas9 SeMet Cas9 Data collection Beamline SPring-8 BL32XU SPring-8 BL41XU Wavelength (Å) 1.000 0.9791 Space group P1 P1 Cell dimensions a, b, c (Å) 76.7, 105.7, 126.8 76.2, 104.5, 125.5 α, β, γ (°) 97.7, 98.4, 100.3 97.0, 98.2, 101.1 Resolution (Å)   50-2.4 (2.54-2.4)   50-2.6 (2.67-2.6) R_(sym) 0.07 (1.53) 0.167 (1.96)  I/σI 22.53 (1.45)  12.62 (1.44)  Completeness (%) 98.2 (96.3) 99.9 (99.9) Redundancy 7.93 (7.88) 19.1 (15.9) CC(1/2) 0.999 (0.671) 0.999 (0.736) Refinement Resolution (Å) 50-2.4 No. reflections 146,862 R_(work)/R_(free) 0.241/0.276 No. atoms Protein 19,021 Nucleic acid 5,013 Solvent 200 B-factors Protein 72.6 Nucleic acid 72.6 Solvent 53.3 R.m.s deviations Bond lengths (Å) 0.002 Bond angles (°) 0.454 Ramachandran plot Favored region 96.8% Allowed region 3.2% Outlier region 0.0% *Highest resolution shell is shown in parenthesis.

The crystallographic asymmetric unit contained two Cas9-sgRNA-DNA ternary complexes (Mol A and Mol B). Although there are conformational differences between the two complexes, sgRNA and DNA are recognized by Cas9 in a similar manner. Most notably, while the HNH domain in Mol A is connected with the RuvC domain by a disordered linker, the HNH domain in Mol B is not visible in the electron density map, indicating the flexible nature of the HNH domain. Thus, Applicants first describe the structural features of Mol A unless otherwise stated, and then discuss the structural differences between the two complexes, which suggest the conformational flexibility of Cas9.

The crystal structure revealed that Cas9 consists of two lobes, a recognition (REC) lobe and a nuclease (NUC) lobe (FIG. 30A-C). The REC lobe can be divided into three regions, a long α-helix referred to as Bridge helix (BH) (residues 60-93), the REC1 (residues 94-179 and 308-713), and REC2 (residues 180-307) domains (FIG. 30A-C). The NUC lobe consists of the RuvC (residues 1-59, 718-769, and 909-1098), HNH (residues 775-908), and PAM-interacting (PI) (residues 1099-1368) domains (FIG. 30A-C). The negatively-charged sgRNA:DNA hybrid duplex is accommodated in a positively-charged groove at the interface between the REC and NUC lobes (FIG. 30D). In the NUC lobe, the RuvC domain is assembled from the three split RuvC motifs (RuvC I-III), which interfaces with the PI domain to form a positively-charged surface that interacts with the 3′ tail of the sgRNA (FIG. 30D). The HNH domain lies in between the RuvC II-III motifs and forms only a few contacts with the rest of the protein.

The REC lobe of Cas9 interacted with the repeat:anti-repeat duplex: The REC lobe comprises the REC1 and REC2 domains. REC1 adopted an elongated, α-helical structure comprising 26 α-helices (α2-α5 and α12-α33) and two β-sheets (P6/(β6/β10 and β7-β9), whereas REC2 adopted a six-helix bundle structure (α6-α11) (FIGS. 31A and 39 ). A Dali search (Holm and Rosenstrom, 2010) revealed that the REC lobe did not share structural similarity with other known proteins, indicating that it is a Cas9-specific functional domain.

The REC lobe is one of the least conserved regions across the three families of Cas9 within the Type II CRISPR system (IIA, IIB and IIC) and many Cas9s contain significantly shorter REC lobes (FIGS. 40, 41 ). Applicants hypothesized that truncations in the REC lobe could be tolerated. As expected, and consistent with the observation that the REC2 domain does not contact the bound sgRNA:DNA hybrid duplex, a Cas9 mutant lacking the REC2 domain (A175-307) showed ˜50% of the wild-type Cas9 activity (FIG. 31B), indicating that the REC2 domain is not critical for DNA cleavage. The lower cleavage efficiency may be attributed in part to the reduced levels of Cas9 (A175-307) expression relative to that of the wild-type protein (FIG. 31C). In striking contrast, deletion of the crRNA repeat-interacting region (A97-150) or tracrRNA anti-repeat-interacting region (A312-409) of the REC1 domain abolished DNA cleavage activity (FIG. 31B), indicating that the recognition of the repeat:anti-repeat duplex by the REC1 domain is critical for Cas9 function.

The PAM-interacting (PI) domain confers PAM specificity: The NUC lobe contains the PI domain, which adopts an elongated structure comprising seven α-helices (α47-α53), a three-stranded antiparallel β-sheet (β18-β20), a five-stranded antiparallel β-sheet (β21-β23, β26 and β27), and two-stranded antiparallel β-sheet (β24 and β25) (FIGS. 31D and 39 ). Similar to the REC lobe, the PI domain also represents a novel protein fold unique to the Cas9 family.

The locations of the bound complementary strand DNA and the active site of the RuvC domain in the present structure suggest that the PI domain is positioned to recognize the PAM sequence on the non-complementary strand of the target DNA. Applicants tested whether replacement of the S. pyogenes Cas9 (SpCas9; Cas9 in this study) PI domain with that of an orthologous Cas9 protein recognizing a different PAM would be sufficient to alter SpCas9 PAM specificity. The Streptococcus thermophilus CRISPR-3 Cas9 (St3Cas9) shares ˜60% sequence identity with SpCas9; furthermore, their crRNA repeats and tracrRNAs are interchangeable (Fonfara et al., 2013). However, SpCas9 and St3Cas9 require different PAM sequences (5′-NGG for Cas9 and 5′-NGGNG for St3Cas9) for target DNA cleavage (Fonfara et al., 2013).

Applicants swapped the two PI domains to generate two chimeras, Sp-St3Cas9 (SpCas9 with the PI domain of St3Cas9) and St3-SpCas9 (St3Cas9 with the PI domain of SpCas9), and examined their cleavage activities for target DNA sequences bearing 5′-NGG PAM (5′-GGGCT) or 5′-NGGNG PAM (5′-GGGCG) (FIG. 31E). SpCas9 and St3-SpCas9, but not St3Cas9, cleaved the target DNA with 5′-NGG PAM (FIG. 31E), indicating that the PI domain of SpCas9 is required for the recognition of 5′-NGG PAM and is sufficient to alter the PAM recognition of St3Cas9. Sp-St3Cas9 retained cleavage activity for the target DNA with 5′-NGG PAM, albeit at a lower level than that of SpCas9 (FIG. 31E). Additionally, deletion of the PI domain (A1099-1368) abolished the cleavage activity (FIG. 31E), indicating that the PI domain is critical for Cas9 function. These results reveal that the PI domain is a major determinant of PAM specificity.

The RuvC domain targets the non-complementary strand DNA: The RuvC domain consists of a six-stranded mixed R-sheet (β1, β2, β5, β11, β14 and β17) flanked by α-helices (α34, α35 and α40-α46) and two additional two-stranded antiparallel β-sheets (β3/β4 and β15/β16) (FIGS. 32A and 39 ). It shares structural similarity with retroviral integrase superfamily members characterized by an RNase H fold, such as Escherichia coli RuvC (PDB code 1HJR, 13% identity, root-mean-square deviation (rmsd) of 3.4 Å for 123 equivalent Cα atoms) (Ariyoshi et al., 1994) and Thermus thermophilus RuvC (PDB code 4LD0, 17% identity, rmsd of 3.4 Å for 129 equivalent Cα atoms) (Ariyoshi et al., 1994) and Thermus thermophilus RuvC (PDB code 4LD0, 17% identity, rmsd of 3.4 Å for 129 equivalent Cα atoms) (Gorecka et al., 2013) (FIG. 32B). RuvC nucleases have four catalytic residues (e.g., Asp7, Glu70, His143 and Asp146 in T. thermophilus RuvC), and cleave Holliday junctions through a two-metal mechanism (Ariyoshi et al., 1994; Chen et al., 2013; Gorecka et al., 2013). Asp10 (Ala), Glu762, His983 and Asp986 of the Cas9 RuvC domain are located at positions similar to those of the catalytic residues of T. thermophilus RuvC (FIG. 32A, B), consistent with the previous results that the D10A mutation abolished cleavage of the non-complementary DNA strand and that Cas9 requires Mg2+ ions for cleavage activity (Gasiunas et al., 2012; Jinek et al., 2012). Moreover, alanine substitution of Glu762, His983 or Asp986 also converted Cas9 into nickases (FIG. 32C, D). Each nickase mutant was able to facilitate targeted double strand breaks using pairs of juxtaposed sgRNAs (FIG. 32C, D), as demonstrated with the D10A nickase previously (Ran et al., 2013). This combination of structural observations and mutational analysis suggest that the Cas9 RuvC domain cleaves the non-complementary strand of the target DNA through the two-metal mechanism previously observed for other retroviral integrase superfamily nucleases.

It is important to note that there are key structural dissimilarities between the Cas9 RuvC domain and RuvC nucleases, explaining their functional differences. Unlike the Cas9 RuvC domain, RuvC nucleases forms a dimer and recognize a Holliday junction (Gorecka et al., 2013) (FIG. 32B). In addition to the conserved RNase H fold, the RuvC domain of Cas9 has additional structural elements involved in the interactions with the guide:DNA duplex (an end-capping loop between α43 and α44), and the PI domain/stem loop 3 (β-hairpin formed by β3 and β4) (FIG. 32A).

The HNH domain targets the complementary strand DNA: The HNH domain comprises a two-stranded antiparallel β-sheet (β12 and β13) flanked by four α-helices (α36-α42) (FIG. 32E). Likewise, it shares structural similarity with HNH endonucleases characterized by a ββα-metal fold, such as the phage T4 endonuclease VII (Endo VII) (Biertumpfel et al., 2007) (PDB code 2QNC, 8% identity, rmsd of 2.6 Å for 60 equivalent Cα atoms) (FIG. 32F) and Vibrio vulnificus nuclease (Li et al., 2003) (PDB code 10UP, 8% identity, rmsd of 2.9 Å for 78 equivalent Cα atoms). HNH nucleases have three catalytic residues (e.g., Asp40, His41, and Asn62 in Endo VII), and cleave nucleic acid substrates through a single-metal mechanism (Biertumpfel et al., 2007; Li et al., 2003). In the structure of the Endo VII N62D mutant in complex with a Holliday junction, a Mg2+ ion is coordinated by Asp40, Asp62, and oxygen atoms of the scissile phosphate group of the substrate, while His41 acts as a general base to activate a water molecule for catalysis (FIG. 32F). Asp839, His840, and Asn863 of the Cas9 HNH domain correspond to Asp40, His41, and Asn62 of Endo VII, respectively (FIG. 32E), consistent with the observation that His840 is critical for the cleavage of the complementary DNA strand (Gasiunas et al., 2012; Jinek et al., 2012). The N863A mutant functions as a nickase (FIG. 32C, D), indicating that Asn863 participates in catalysis. These observations suggest that the Cas9 HNH domain may cleave the complementary strand of the target DNA through a single-metal mechanism as observed for other HNH superfamily nucleases. However, in the present structure, Asn863 of Cas9 is located at a position different from that of Asn62 in Endo VII (Biertumpfel et al., 2007), whereas Asp839 and His840 (Ala) of Cas9 are located at positions similar to those of Asp40 and His41 of Endo VII, respectively (FIG. 32E, F). This might be due to the absence of divalent ions, such as Mg2+, in Applicants' crystallization solution, suggesting that Asn863 can point towards the active site and participate in catalysis. Whereas the HNH domain shares a ββα-metal fold with other HNN endonuclease, their overall structures are different (FIG. 32E, F), consistent with the differences in their substrate specificities.

sgRNA recognizes target DNA via Watson-Crick base pairing: The sgRNA consists of crRNA- and tracrRNA-derived sequences connected by an artificial tetraloop (FIG. 33A). The crRNA sequence can be subdivided into guide (20-nt) and repeat (12-nt) regions, and the tracrRNA sequence likewise into anti-repeat (14-nt) and three tracrRNA stem loops (FIG. 33A). The crystal structure reveals that the sgRNA binds the target DNA to form a T-shaped architecture comprising a guide:DNA duplex, repeat:anti-repeat duplex and stem loops 1-3 (FIG. 33A, B). The repeat:anti-repeat duplex and stem loop 1 are connected by a single nucleotide (A51), and stem loops 1 and 2 are connected by a 5-nt single-stranded linker (nucleotides 63-67).

The guide (nucleotides 1-20) and target DNA (nucleotides 3′-23′) form the guide:DNA hybrid duplex via 20 Watson-Crick base pairs, with the conformation of the duplex distorted from a canonical A-form RNA duplex (FIGS. 33B and 42 ). The crRNA repeat (nucleotides 21-32) and tracrRNA anti-repeat (nucleotides 37-50) form the repeat:anti-repeat duplex via nine Watson-Crick base pairs (U22:A49-A26:U45 and G29:C40-A32:U37) (FIG. 33A, B). Within this region, G27, A28, A41, A42, G43, and U44 are unpaired, with A28 and U44 flipped out from the duplex (FIG. 33C). The nucleobases of G27 and A41 stack with the A26:U45 and G29:C40 pairs, respectively, and the 2-amino group of G27 interacts with the backbone phosphate group between G43 and U44, stabilizing the duplex structure (FIG. 33C). G21 and U50 form a wobble base pair at the three-way junction between the guide:DNA/repeat:anti-repeat duplexes and stem loop 1, stabilizing the T-shaped architecture (FIG. 33C).

As expected from the RNA-fold predictions of the nucleotide sequence, the tracrRNA 3′ tail (nucleotides 68-81 and 82-96) form stem loops 2 and 3 via four and six Watson-Crick base pairs (A69:U80-U72:A77 and G82:C96-G87:C91), respectively (FIG. 33A, B). Previously unappreciated, nucleotides 52-62 also form a stem loop (stem loop 1) via three Watson-Crick base pairs (G53:C61, G54:C60 and C55:G58), with U59 flipped out from the stem (FIG. 33A, B). Stem loop 1 is stabilized by the G62-G53:C61 stacking interaction and the G62-A51/A52 polar interactions (FIG. 33C).

The guide:DNA and repeat:anti-repeat duplexes are accommodated and deeply buried in a positively-charged groove at the interface of the two lobes, while the rest of the sgRNA extensively interacts with the positively-charged surface on the back side of the protein (FIG. 30D). In Mol A, the 3′-terminal bases of the target DNA (3′-ACC complementary to the PAM) are not visible in the electron density map. In contrast, the two adjacent bases (3′-AC) in Mol B are not recognized by Cas9, although they are structurally ordered due to the crystal packing interactions and are visible in the electron density map. These observations suggest that the 3′-ACC sequence complementary to the PAM (5′-TGG) is not recognized by Cas9, consistent with the previous biochemical data demonstrating that Cas9-catalyzed DNA cleavage requires the 5′-NGG PAM on the non-complementary strand, but not the 3′-NCC sequence on the complementary strand (Jinek et al., 2012).

Previous studies showed that although sgRNA with a 48-nt tracrRNA tail (referred to as sgRNA(+48)) is a minimal region for the Cas9-catalyzed DNA cleavage in vitro (Jinek et al., 2012), sgRNAs with extended tracrRNA tails, sgRNA(+67) and sgRNA(+85), dramatically improved Cas9 cleavage activity in vivo (Hsu et al., 2013). The present structure revealed that sgRNA(+48), sgRNA(+67) and sgRNA(+85) contain stem loop 1, stem loops 1-2 and stem loops 1-3, respectively (FIG. 33A, B). These observations indicated that, whereas stem loop 1 is essential for the formation of the functional Cas9-sgRNA complex, stem loops 2 and 3 further support the stable complex formation as well as enhance sgRNA stability, thus improving the in vivo activity.

To confirm the significance of each sgRNA structural component on Cas9 function, Applicants tested a number of sgRNAs with mutations in the repeat:anti-repeat duplex, stem loops 1-3, and the linker between stem loops 1 and 2. Applicants' results revealed that, whereas stem loops 2 and 3 as well as the linker region can tolerate a large number of mutations, the repeat:anti-repeat duplex and stem loop 1 are critical for Cas9 function (FIG. 33D). Moreover, the sgRNA sequence can tolerate a large number of mutations (FIG. 33D, reconstructed sgRNA). These results highlight the functional significance of the structure-dependent recognition of the repeat:anti-repeat duplex by Cas9.

Conserved arginine cluster on Bridge helix play a critical role in sgRNA:DNA interaction: The crRNA guide region is primarily recognized by the REC lobe (FIG. 34A). The backbone phosphate groups of the crRNA guide region (nucleotides 4-6 and 13-20) interact with the REC1 domain (Arg165, Gly166, Arg403, Asn407, Lys510, Tyr515 and Arg661) and Bridge helix (Ala59, Arg63, Arg66, Arg70, Arg71, Arg74 and Arg78) (FIG. 34B), and the 2′-hydroxyl groups of C15, U16 and G19 hydrogen bond with Tyr450, Arg447/Ile448 and Thr404 in the REC1 domain (FIG. 34B), respectively. These observations suggested that the Watson-Crick faces of eight PAM-proximal nucleotides of the Cas9-bound sgRNA are exposed to the solvent, thus serving as a nucleation site for pairing with the target complementary strand. This is consistent with previous reports that the 10-12 bp PAM-proximal “seed” region is critical for Cas9-catalyzed DNA cleavage (Cong et al., 2013; Fu et al., 2013; Hsu et al., 2013; Jinek et al., 2012; Mali et al., 2013a; Pattanayak et al., 2013).

Mutational analysis demonstrated that the R66A, R70A and R74A mutations on Bridge helix markedly reduced DNA cleavage activities (FIG. 34C), highlighting the functional significance of the recognition of the sgRNA “seed” region by the Bridge helix. Although Arg78 and Arg165 also interact with the “seed” region, the R78A and R165A mutants showed only moderately decreased activities (FIG. 34C). These results may reflect that, whereas Arg66, Arg70 and Arg74 form bifurcated salt bridges with the sgRNA backbone, Arg78 and Arg165 form a single salt bridge with the sgRNA backbone. A cluster of arginine residues on the Bridge helix are highly conserved among Cas9 proteins in the Type II-A-C systems (FIGS. 40, 41 ), suggesting that the Bridge helix is a universal structural feature of Cas9 proteins involved in recognition of the sgRNA and target DNA. This notion is supported by a previous observation that a strictly conserved arginine residue, equivalent to Arg70 of S. pyogenes Cas9, is essential for the function of Francisella novicida Cas9 in the Type II-B system (Sampson et al., 2013). Moreover, the alanine mutation of the repeat:anti-repeat duplex-interacting residues (Arg75 and Lys163) and stem loop 1-interacting residue (Arg69) resulted in decreased DNA cleavage activity (FIG. 34C), confirming the functional importance of the recognition of the repeat:anti-repeat duplex and stem loop 1 by Cas9.

The crRNA guide region is recognized by Cas9 in a sequence-independent manner except for the U16-Arg447 and G18-Arg71 interactions (FIG. 34A, B). This base-specific G18-Arg71 interaction may partly explain the observed preference of Cas9 for sgRNAs having guanines in the four PAM-proximal guide sequences (Wang et al., 2014).

The REC1 and RuvC domains facilitate RNA-guided DNA targeting: Cas9 recognizes the 20-bp DNA target site in a sequence-independent manner (FIG. 34A). The backbone phosphate groups of the target DNA (nucleotides 1′, 9′-11′, 13′, and 20′) interact with the REC1 (Asn497, Trp659, Arg661 and Gln695), RuvC (Gln926), and PI (Glu1108) domains. The C2′ atoms of the target DNA (nucleotides 5′, 7′, 8′, 11′, 19′, and 20′) form van der Waals interactions with the REC1 domain (Leu169, Tyr450, Met495, Met694 and His698) and RuvC domain (Ala728) (FIG. 34D). These interactions are likely to contribute towards discriminating between DNA vs. RNA targets by Cas9. The terminal base pair of the guide:DNA duplex (G1:C20′) is recognized by the RuvC domain via end-capping interactions (FIG. 34D); the nucleobases of sgRNA G1 and target DNA C20′ interact with the side chains of Tyr1013 and Val1015, respectively, whereas the 2′-hydroxyl and phosphate groups of sgRNA G1 interact with Val1009 and Gln926, respectively. These end-capping interactions are consistent with the previous observation that Cas9 recognizes a 17-20-bp guide:DNA duplex, and that extended guide sequences are degraded in cells and do not contribute to improving sequence specificity (Mali et al., 2013a; Ran et al., 2013). Taken together, these structural findings explain the RNA-guided DNA targeting mechanism of Cas9.

The repeat:anti-repeat duplex is recognized by the REC and NUC lobes in a sequence-dependent manner: The repeat:anti-repeat duplex is extensively recognized by the REC and NUC lobes (FIG. 34A). The backbone phosphate groups of the crRNA repeat (nucleotides 24, 26, and 27) and anti-repeat (nucleotides 41, 45, 46, and 48-50) interact with the REC1 domain (Arg115, His116, His160, Lys163, Arg340, and Arg403), PI domain (Lys1113), and Bridge helix (Lys76) (FIG. 34E, F). The 2′-hydroxyl groups of the crRNA repeat (nucleotides 22-24) and anti-repeat (nucleotides 43-45 and 47) hydrogen bond with the REC1 domain (Leu101, Ser104, Phe105, Ile135, Tyr359, and Gln402) and the PI domain (Ile1110 and Tyr1131).

In contrast to the sequence-independent recognition of the guide region, there are sequence-dependent interactions between Cas9 and the repeat:anti-repeat duplex. The nucleobase of the flipped U44 is sandwiched between the side chains of Tyr325 and His328, with its N3 atom hydrogen bonded with the carbonyl group of Tyr325, while that of unpaired G43 stacks with the side chain of Tyr359 and hydrogen bonds with the side chain of Asp364 (FIG. 34A, F). Finally, the nucleobases of U23/A49 and A42/G43 hydrogen bond with the side chain of Arg1122 and the main-chain carbonyl group of Phe351, respectively.

In the present structure, the repeat:anti-repeat duplex is recognized primarily by the REC lobe, which is divergent in sequence and length among Cas9 orthologs within the Type II-A-C systems (FIGS. 40, 41 ), consistent with the previous observation that Cas9 and sgRNA are interchangeable only between closely related Type II systems (Fonfara et al., 2013). The three PAM-distal base pairs (C30:G39-A32:U37) are not recognized by Cas9 and protrude from the complex (FIG. 34A), consistent with a proposed model in which a Cas9-bound repeat:anti-repeat duplex is processed by the host RNase III enzyme (Deltcheva et al., 2011).

The nucleobases of G21 and U50 in the G21:U50 wobble pair stack with the terminal C20:G1′ pair in the guide:DNA duplex and the side chain of Tyr72 on Bridge helix, respectively, with the U50 04 atom hydrogen bonded with the side chain of Arg75 (FIG. 34E). Notably, A51 adopts the syn-conformation, and is oriented in the direction opposite to U50 (FIGS. 33C and 34G). The nucleobase of A51 is sandwiched between the Phe1105 side chain in the PI domain and the U63 nucleobase in the linker, with its N7 and N1 atoms hydrogen bonded with the main-chain amide group of Phe1105 and the G62 2′-hydroxyl group in stem loop 1, respectively (FIG. 34G). Whereas a repeat:anti-repeat duplex is diverse in sequence and length among the Type II-A-C systems, the G21:U50 base pair is highly conserved among Cas9s (Fonfara et al., 2013), suggesting that this wobble pairing is a universal structural feature involved in the three-way junction formation.

To verify the sequence-dependent recognition of the repeat:anti-repeat duplex, Applicants evaluated the effect of repeat:anti-repeat mutations on Cas9-meditated DNA cleavage, and found multiple mutations that significantly reduce Cas9 activity (FIG. 34C). Notably, replacement of G43, which forms a base-specific hydrogen bond with Asp364, with adenine reduced Cas9 activity by over 3-fold. In addition, replacement of the flipped U44 in the repeat:anti-repeat duplex with adenine resulted in over a 5-fold drop in cleavage activity, whereas replacement of U44 with another pyrimidine base (cytosine) did not significantly affect cleavage activity (FIG. 34C). These results suggest that base-specific recognition of G43 and U44 could play an important role in sgRNA recognition by Cas9.

sgRNA stem loops 1-3 interact with Cas9: Stem loop 1 is primarily recognized by the REC lobe together with the PI domain (FIG. 34A). The backbone phosphate groups of stem loop 1 (nucleotides 52, 53, and 59-61) interact with the REC1 domain (Leu455, Ser460, Arg467, Thr472, and Ile473), PI domain (Lys 1123 and Lys 1124), and Bridge helix (Arg70 and Arg74), with the 2′-hydroxyl group of G58 hydrogen bonded with Leu455 in the REC1 domain. A52 interacts with Phe1105 through a face-to-edge π-π stacking interaction (FIG. 34G), and the flipped U59 nucleobase hydrogen bonds with the side chain of Asn77 (FIG. 34H).

Stem loops 2 and 3, and the single-stranded linker are primarily recognized by the NUC lobe (FIG. 34A); this contrasts with stem loop 1 and the guide:DNA/repeat:anti-repeat duplexes, which are recognized by both of the NUC and REC lobes. The backbone phosphate groups of the linker (nucleotides 63-65 and 67) interact with the RuvC domain (Glu57, Lys742, and Lys1097), PI domain (Thr1102), and Bridge helix (Arg69), with the 2′-hydroxyl groups of U64 and A65 hydrogen bonded with Glu57 and His721, respectively (FIG. 34I). The nucleobase of C67 hydrogen bonds with the main-chain amide group of Val1100 (FIG. 34I).

Stem loop 2 is recognized by Cas9 via the interactions between the NUC lobe and the non-Watson-Crick A68:G81 pair, which is formed by direct (between the A68 N6 and G81 06 atoms) and water-mediated (between the A68 N1 and G81 N1 atoms) hydrogen-bonding interactions (FIG. 34J). The nucleobases of A68 and G81 contact the side chains of Ser1351 and Tyr1356, respectively, with the A68:G81 pair recognized by Thr1358 via a water-mediated hydrogen bond (FIG. 34J). The 2′-hydroxyl group of A68 hydrogen bonds with the side chain of His1349, and the 2-amino group of G81 hydrogen bonds with the main-chain carbonyl group of Lys33 (FIG. 34J).

Stem loop 3 interacts with the NUC lobe more extensively relative to stem loop 2 (FIG. 34K). The backbone phosphate groups of C91 and G92 interact with the RuvC domain (Arg40 and Lys44) (FIG. 34K), while the nucleobases of G89 and U90 hydrogen bond with Gln1272 and Glu1225/Ala1227, respectively (FIG. 34K). The nucleobases of A88 and C91 are recognized by the side chain of Asn46 via multiple hydrogen-bonding interactions (FIG. 34K).

Structural flexibility of Cas9 and sgRNA: Although the HNH domain cleaves the complementary strand of the target DNA at a position three nucleotides upstream of the PAM sequence (Gasiunas et al., 2012; Jinek et al., 2012), in the present structure the HNH domain is positioned away from the scissile phosphate group of the bound complementary strand (FIG. 35A). A structural comparison of Mol A and Mol B provided mechanistic insights into the complementary strand cleavage by the HNH domain. In Mol A, the HNH domain is followed by the α40 helix of the RuvC domain, which is connected with the α41 helix by an α40-α41 linker (residues 919-925) (FIG. 35A). Whereas in Mol A residues 913-925 form the C-terminal portion of the α43 helix and α43-α44 linker, in Mol B these residues form an extended α-helix, which is directed toward the cleavage site of the complementary strand (FIG. 35A). These observations suggest that the HNH domain can approach and cleave the target DNA through conformational changes in the segment connecting the HNH and RuvC domains.

Moreover, the structural comparison revealed a conformational flexibility between the REC and NUC lobes (FIG. 35B). Compared to Mol A, Mol B adopts a more open conformation, in which the two lobes are rotated by 15° at a hinge loop between Bridge helix and the strand β5 in the RuvC domain (FIG. 35B). The bound sgRNA also undergoes an accompanying conformational change at the single-stranded linker, which interacts with the hinge loop (FIG. 35C). Applicants also observed an accompanying displacement of the β17-β18 loop of the PI domain, which interacts with the repeat:anti-repeat duplex and the α2-α3 loop of the REC1 domain (FIG. 35B). Notably, there is no direct contact between the two lobes in the present structure, except for the interactions between the α2-α3 and β17-β18 loops (FIG. 35D), suggesting that Cas9 is highly flexible in the absence of the sgRNA. The flexible nature of Cas9 is likely to play a role in the assembly of the Cas9-sgRNA-DNA ternary complex.

The crystal structure of Cas9 in complex with guide RNA and target DNA reveals that the 20-bp heteroduplex formed by the crRNA guide region and the complementary strand of the target DNA is accommodated in the positively-charged groove at the interface between the REC and NUC lobes of Cas9, with the scissile phosphate group of the target properly positioned for cleavage by the HNH domain. Although the present structure does not contain the non-complementary DNA strand, the position of the bound complementary strand suggests that the scissile phosphate of the non-complementary strand is located in the vicinity of the active site of the RuvC domain, consistent with previous biochemical data (Gasiunas et al., 2012; Jinek et al., 2012). Furthermore, Applicants' structural and functional analyses indicate that the PI domain participates in the recognition of the PAM sequence of the non-complementary strand.

Based on these observations, Applicants propose a model for the Cas9-catalyzed RNA-guided DNA cleavage (FIG. 36 ). Cas9 recognizes the PAM-proximal guide region and repeat:anti-repeat duplex of sgRNA to form a Cas9-sgRNA binary complex. The binary complex subsequently recognizes the DNA sequence complementary to the 20-nt guide region of the bound sgRNA, forming the final Cas9-sgRNA-target DNA ternary complex. During the ternary complex formation, the PI domain recognizes the PAM sequence of the non-complementary strand, facilitating the R-loop formation. Upon assembly of the ternary complex, the mobile HNH domain approaches and cleaves the complementary strand in the guide:DNA duplex, whereas the RuvC domain cleaves the single-stranded, non-complementary strand.

Applicants' crystal structure provides a critical step towards understanding the molecular mechanism of RNA-guided DNA targeting by Cas9. Further structural and functional studies with S. pyogenes Cas9 or related orthologs, including the structural determination of the Cas9-sgRNA-DNA ternary complex containing the non-complementary strand, may be important for illuminating details such as Cas9-mediated recognition of PAM sequences on the target DNA or mismatch tolerance between the sgRNA:DNA duplex. However, the present structural and functional analyses already provide a useful scaffold for rational engineering of Cas9-based genome modulating technologies. Applicants reported, for example, an S. pyogenes Cas9 truncation mutant (FIG. 31B) that will facilitate packaging of Cas9 into size-constrained viral vectors for in vivo and therapeutic applications. Similarly, future engineering of the PI domain allows for programming of PAM specificity, improving target site recognition fidelity, and increasing the versatility of the Cas9 genome engineering platform.

Experimental Procedures Protein preparation: The gene encoding full-length S. pyogenes Cas9 (residues 1-1368) was cloned between the NdeI and XhoI sites of the modified pCold-GST vector (TaKaRa). The protein was expressed at 20° C. in Escherichia coli Rosetta 2 (DE3) (Novagen), and was purified by Ni-NTA Superflow resin (QIAGEN). The eluted protein was incubated overnight at 4° C. with TEV protease to remove the GST-tag, and further purified by chromatography on Ni-NTA, Mono S (GE Healthcare) and HiLoad Superdex 200 16/60 (GE Healthcare) columns. The SeMet-labeled protein was prepared using a similar protocol for the native protein. The sgRNA was in vitro transcribed by T7 polymerase using a PCR-amplified template, and was purified on 10% denaturing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The target DNA was purchased from Sigma-Aldrich. The purified Cas9 protein was mixed with sgRNA and DNA (molar ratio 1:1.5:2), and then the complex was purified using a Superdex 200 Increase column (GE Healthcare) in a buffer containing 10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, 150 mM NaCl and 1 mM DTT.

Crystallography: The purified Cas9-sgRNA-DNA complex was crystallized at 20° C. by the hanging-drop vapor diffusion method. Crystals were obtained by mixing 1 μl of complex solution (A_(260 nm)=15) and 1 μl of reservoir solution (12% PEG 3,350, 100 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, 200 mM ammonium acetate, 150 mM NaCl and 100 mM NDSB-256).The SeMet-labeled protein was crystallized under conditions similar to those for the native protein. X-ray diffraction data were collected at 100 K on the beamlines BL32XU and BL41XU at SPring-8 (Hyogo, Japan). The crystals were cryoprotected in reservoir solution supplemented with 25% ethylene glycol. X-ray diffraction data were processed using XDS (Kabsch, 2010). The structure was determined by the SAD method, using the 2.8 Å resolution data from the SeMet-labeled crystal. Forty of the potential 44 Se atoms were located using SHELXD (Sheldrick, 2008) and autoSHARP (delaFortelle and Bricogne, 1997). The initial phases were calculated using autoSHARP, and further improved by 2-fold NCS averaging using DM (Winn et al., 2011). The model was automatically built using PHENIX AutoSol (Adams et al., 2002), followed by manual model building using COOT (Emsley and Cowtan, 2004) and refinement using PHENIX (Adams et al., 2002). The resulting model was further refined using for native 2.4 Å resolution data.

Cell culture and transfection: Human embryonic kidney (HEK) cell line 293FT (Life Technologies) or mouse Neuro 2a (Sigma-Aldrich) cell line was maintained in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's Medium (DMEM) supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum (HyClone), 2 mM GlutaMAX (Life Technologies), 100 U/ml penicillin, and 100 μg/ml streptomycin at 37° C. with 5% CO₂ incubation. Cells were seeded onto 24-well plates (Corning) at a density of 120,000 cells/well, 24 h prior to transfection. Cells were transfected using Lipofectamine 2000 (Life Technologies) at 70-80% confluency following the manufacturer's recommended protocol. A total of 400 ng Cas9 plasmid and 100 ng of U6::sgRNA PCR product was transfected.

SURVEYOR nuclease assay for genome modification: 293FT cells were transfected with DNA as described above. Cells were incubated at 37° C. for 72 h post-transfection prior to genomic DNA extraction. Genomic DNA was extracted using the QuickExtract DNA Extraction Solution (Epicentre) following the manufacturer's protocol. Briefly, pelleted cells were resuspended in QuickExtract solution and incubated at 65° C. for 15 min, 68° C. for 15 min, and 98° C. for 10 min.

The genomic region flanking the CRISPR target site for each gene was PCR amplified, and products were purified using QiaQuick Spin Column (Qiagen) following the manufacturer's protocol. 400 ng total of the purified PCR products were mixed with 2 μl 10×Taq DNA Polymerase PCR buffer (Enzymatics) and ultrapure water to a final volume of 20 μl, and subjected to a re-annealing process to enable heteroduplex formation: 95° C. for 10 min, 95° C. to 85° C. ramping at −2° C./s, 85° C. to 25° C. at −0.25° C./s, and 25° C. hold for 1 min. After re-annealing, products were treated with SURVEYOR nuclease and SURVEYOR enhancer S (Transgenomics) following the manufacturer's recommended protocol, and analyzed on 4-20% Novex TBE poly-acrylamide gels (Life Technologies). Gels were stained with SYBR Gold DNA stain (Life Technologies) for 30 min and imaged with a Gel Doc gel imaging system (Bio-rad). Quantification was based on relative band intensities. Indel percentage was determined by the formula, 100×(1−(1−(b+c)/(a +b+c))^(1/2)), where a is the integrated intensity of the undigested PCR product, and b and c are the integrated intensities of each cleavage product.

Western blot: HEK 293FT cells were transfected and lysed in 1×RIPA buffer (Sigma-Aldrich) supplemented with Protease Inhibitor (Roche). Lysates were loaded onto Bolt 4-12% Bis-Tris Plus Gel (Invitrogen) and transferred to nitrocellulose membranes. Membranes were blocked in Tris-buffered saline containing 0.1% Tween-20 and 5% blocking agent (G-Biosciences). Membrane was probed with rabbit anti-FLAG (1:5000, Abcam), HRP-conjugated anti-GAPDH (1:5,000 Cell Signaling Technology), and HRP-conjugated anti-rabbit (1:1000). Blots were visualized on Gel Doc XR+ System (Bio-rad).

Sequence Information:

Italic: 3XFLAG sequence Underlined: NLS sequences Wildtype SpCas9 ATGGACTATAAGGACCACGACGGAGACTACAAGGATCATG ATATTGATTACAAAGACGATGACGATAAG ATGGCCCCAAA GAAGAAGCGGAAGGTCGGTATCCACGGAGTCCCAGCAGCC GACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGACATCGGCACCAACT CTGTGGGCTGGGCCGTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCC CAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCAACACCGACCGGCAC AGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACA GCGGCGAAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGC CAGAAGAAGATACACCAGACGGAAGAACCGGATCTGCTAT CTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAGGTGGACG ACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGA AGAGGATAAGAAGCACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAAC ATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACGAGAAGTACCCCACCA TCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAA GGCCGACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATG ATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCACTTCCTGATCGAGGGCGACCTGA ACCCCGACAACAGCGACGTGGACAAGCTGTTCATCCAGCT GGTGCAGACCTACAACCAGCTGTTCGAGGAAAACCCCATC AACGCCAGCGGCGTGGACGCCAAGGCCATCCTGTCTGCCA GACTGAGCAAGAGCAGACGGCTGGAAAATCTGATCGCCCA GCTGCCCGGCGAGAAGAAGAATGGCCTGTTCGGCAACCTG ATTGCCCTGAGCCTGGGCCTGACCCCCAACTTCAAGAGCA ACTTCGACCTGGCCGAGGATGCCAAACTGCAGCTGAGCAA GGACACCTACGACGACGACCTGGACAACCTGCTGGCCCAG ATCGGCGACCAGTACGCCGACCTGTTTCTGGCCGCCAAGA ACCTGTCCGACGCCATCCTGCTGAGCGACATCCTGAGAGT GAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCCCTGAGCGCCTCTATG ATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGC TGAAAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAA AGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAGAGCAAGAACGGCTACGCCGGC TACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTACAAGT TCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGA ACTGCTCGTGAAGCTGAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAAG CAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATCCCCCACCAGATCC ACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGA TTTTTACCCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGAG AAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCATCCCCTACTACGTGGGCCCTC TGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACCAGAAA GAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTG GTGGACAAGGGCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGA TGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCAACGAGAAGGTGCT GCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTAT AACGAGCTGACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAATGA GAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCGAGCAGAAAAAGGCCAT CGTGGACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTG AAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCT TCGACTCCGTGGAAATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCAA CGCCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAAAATTATC AAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGACA TTCTGGAAGATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGAGGA CAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTGAAAACCTATGCCCAC CTGTTCGACGACAAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGA GATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGCTGATCAA CGGCATCCGGGACAAGCAGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGAT TTCCTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAACTTCATGC AGCTGATCCACGACGACAGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACAT CCAGAAAGCCCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCTGCAC GAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCAGCCCCGCCATTAAGA AGGGCATCCTGCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGT GAAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCCGAGAACATCGTGATC GAAATGGCCAGAGAGAACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAGA AGAACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGAAGAGGGCAT CAAAGAGCTGGGCAGCCAGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGTG GAAAACACCCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAAGCTGTACCTGTACT ACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGGATATGTACGTGGACCAGGAACT GGACATCAACCGGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACCATATC GTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAAGGACGACTCCATCGACAACA AGGTGCTGACCAGAAGCGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAGAGCGA CAACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGAAGATGAAGAAC TACTGGCGGCAGCTGCTGAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGA GAAAGTTCGACAATCTGACCAAGGCCGAGAGAGGCGGCCT GAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGCTTCATCAAGAGACAGCTG GTGGAAACCCGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGATCC TGGACTCCCGGATGAACACTAAGTACGACGAGAATGACAA GCTGATCCGGGAAGTGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCAAG CTGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGTTTTACAAAG TGCGCGAGATCAACAACTACCACCACGCCCACGACGCCTA CCTGAACGCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATCAAAAAGTAC CCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGACTACAAGG TGTACGACGTGCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGGA AATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCCAAGTACTTCTTCTACAGCAAC ATCATGAACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCAACG GCGAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAAACGGCGA AACCGGGGAGATCGTGTGGGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCC ACCGTGCGGAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAAGTGAATATCG TGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCAGCAAAGA GTCTATCCTGCCCAAGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCC AGAAAGAAGGACTGGGACCCTAAGAAGTACGGCGGCTTCG ACAGCCCCACCGTGGCCTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGCCAA AGTGGAAAAGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAA GAGCTGCTGGGGATCACCATCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCG AGAAGAATCCCATCGACTTTCTGGAAGCCAAGGGCTACAA AGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCTAAGTAC TCCCTGTTCGAGCTGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGG CCTCTGCCGGCGAACTGCAGAAGGGAAACGAACTGGCCCT GCCCTCCAAATATGTGAACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGCCAC TATGAGAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAGA AACAGCTGTTTGTGGAACAGCACAAGCACTACCTGGACGA GATCATCGAGCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAGAGAGTGATC CTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGCCTACA ACAAGCACCGGGATAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAA TATCATCCACCTGTTTACCCTGACCAATCTGGGAGCCCCT GCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACCATCGACCGGAAGA GGTACACCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGAT CCACCAGAGCATCACCGGCCTGTACGAGACACGGATCGAC CTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCGACAAAAGGCCGGCGGCCACGA AAAAGGCCGGCCAGGCAAAAAAGAAAAAG (SEQ ID NO: 114) Sp_del(97-150) ATGGACTATAAGGACCACGACGGAGACTACAAGGATCATG ATATTGATTACAAAGACGATGACGATAAG ATGGCCCCAAA GAAGAAGCGGAAGGTCGGTATCCACGGAGTCCCAGCAGCC GACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGACATCGGCACCAACT CTGTGGGCTGGGCCGTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCC CAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCAACACCGACCGGCAC AGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACA GCGGCGAAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGC CAGAAGAAGATACACCAGACGGAAGAACCGGATCTGCTAT CTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAGGTGGACG ACAGCCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGAT CAAGTTCCGGGGCCACTTCCTGATCGAGGGCGACCTGAAC CCCGACAACAGCGACGTGGACAAGCTGTTCATCCAGCTGG TGCAGACCTACAACCAGCTGTTCGAGGAAAACCCCATCAA CGCCAGCGGCGTGGACGCCAAGGCCATCCTGTCTGCCAGA CTGAGCAAGAGCAGACGGCTGGAAAATCTGATCGCCCAGC TGCCCGGCGAGAAGAAGAATGGCCTGTTCGGAAACCTGAT TGCCCTGAGCCTGGGCCTGACCCCCAACTTCAAGAGCAAC TTCGACCTGGCCGAGGATGCCAAACTGCAGCTGAGCAAGG ACACCTACGACGACGACCTGGACAACCTGCTGGCCCAGAT CGGCGACCAGTACGCCGACCTGTTTCTGGCCGCCAAGAAC CTGTCCGACGCCATCCTGCTGAGCGACATCCTGAGAGTGA ACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCCCTGAGCGCCTCTATGAT CAAGAGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCTG AAAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAAAG AGATTTTCTTCGACCAGAGCAAGAACGGCTACGCCGGCTA CATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTACAAGTTC ATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGAAC TGCTCGTGAAGCTGAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAAGCA GCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATCCCCCACCAGATCCAC CTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATT TTTACCCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGAGAA GATCCTGACCTTCCGCATCCCCTACTACGTGGGCCCTCTG GCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACCAGAAAGA GCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGT GGACAAGGGCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGATG ACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCAACGAGAAGGTGCTGC CCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTATAA CGAGCTGACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAATGAGA AAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCGAGCAGAAAAAGGCCATCG TGGACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTGAA GCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCTTC GACTCCGTGGAAATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCAACG CCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAAAATTATCAA GGACAAGGACTTCCTGGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGACATT CTGGAAGATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGAGGACA GAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTGAAAACCTATGCCCACCT GTTCGACGACAAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGAGA TACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGCTGATCAACG GCATCCGGGACAAGCAGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGATTT CCTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAACTTCATGCAG CTGATCCACGACGACAGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACATCC AGAAAGCCCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCTGCACGA GCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCAGCCCCGCCATTAAGAAG GGCATCCTGCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGTGA AAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCCGAGAACATCGTGATCGA AATGGCCAGAGAGAACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAGAAG AACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGAAGAGGGCATCA AAGAGCTGGGCAGCCAGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGTGGA AAACACCCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAAGCTGTACCTGTACTAC CTGCAGAATGGGCGGGATATGTACGTGGACCAGGAACTGG ACATCAACCGGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACCATATCGT GCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAAGGACGACTCCATCGACAACAAG GTGCTGACCAGAAGCGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAGAGCGACA ACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGAAGATGAAGAACTA CTGGCGGCAGCTGCTGAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGAGA AAGTTCGACAATCTGACCAAGGCCGAGAGAGGCGGCCTGA GCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGCTTCATCAAGAGACAGCTGGT GGAAACCCGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGATCCTG GACTCCCGGATGAACACTAAGTACGACGAGAATGACAAGC TGATCCGGGAAGTGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCAAGCT GGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGTTTTACAAAGTG CGCGAGATCAACAACTACCACCACGCCCACGACGCCTACC TGAACGCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATCAAAAAGTACCC TAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGACTACAAGGTG TACGACGTGCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGGAAA TCGGCAAGGCTACCGCCAAGTACTTCTTCTACAGCAACAT CATGAACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCAACGGC GAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAAACGGCGAAA CCGGGGAGATCGTGTGGGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCCAC CGTGCGGAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAAGTGAATATCGTG AAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCAGCAAAGAGT CTATCCTGCCCAAGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCCAG AAAGAAGGACTGGGACCCTAAGAAGTACGGCGGCTTCGAC AGCCCCACCGTGGCCTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGCCAAAG TGGAAAAGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAAGA GCTGCTGGGGATCACCATCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAG AAGAATCCCATCGACTTTCTGGAAGCCAAGGGCTACAAAG AAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCTAAGTACTC CCTGTTCGAGCTGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGGCC TCTGCCGGCGAACTGCAGAAGGGAAACGAACTGGCCCTGC CCTCCAAATATGTGAACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGCCACTA TGAGAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAGAAA CAGCTGTTTGTGGAACAGCACAAGCACTACCTGGACGAGA TCATCGAGCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAGAGAGTGATCCT GGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGCCTACAAC AAGCACCGGGATAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAATA TCATCCACCTGTTTACCCTGACCAATCTGGGAGCCCCTGC CGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACCATCGACCGGAAGAGG TACACCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGATCC ACCAGAGCATCACCGGCCTGTACGAGACACGGATCGACCT GTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCGACAAAAGGCCGGCGGCCACGAAA AAGGCCGGCCAGGCAAAAAAGAAAAAG (SEQ ID NO: 115) Sp_del (175-307) ATGGACTATAAGGACCACGACGGAGACTACAAGGATCATG ATATTGATTACAAAGACGATGACGATAAG ATGGCCCCAAA GAAGAAGCGGAAGGTCGGTATCCACGGAGTCCCAGCAGCC GACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGACATCGGCACCAACT CTGTGGGCTGGGCCGTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCC CAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCAACACCGACCGGCAC AGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACA GCGGCGAAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGC CAGAAGAAGATACACCAGACGGAAGAACCGGATCTGCTAT CTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAGGTGGACG ACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGA AGAGGATAAGAAGCACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAAC ATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACGAGAAGTACCCCACCA TCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAA GGCCGACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATG ATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCACTTCCTGATCGAGGGCGACCTGG TGAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCCCTGAGCGCCTCTAT GATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTG CTGAAAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTACA AAGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAGAGCAAGAACGGCTACGCCGG CTACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTACAAG TTCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGG AACTGCTCGTGAAGCTGAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAA GCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATCCCCCACCAGATC CACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAG ATTTTTACCCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGA GAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCATCCCCTACTACGTGGGCCCT CTGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACCAGAA AGAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGT GGTGGACAAGGGCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGG ATGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCAACGAGAAGGTGC TGCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTA TAACGAGCTGACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAATG AGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCGAGCAGAAAAAGGCCA TCGTGGACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGT GAAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGC TTCGACTCCGTGGAAATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCA ACGCCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAAAATTAT CAAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGAC ATTCTGGAAGATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGAGG ACAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTGAAAACCTATGCCCA CCTGTTCGACGACAAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGG AGATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGCTGATCA ACGGCATCCGGGACAAGCAGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGA TTTCCTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAACTTCATG CAGCTGATCCACGACGACAGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACA TCCAGAAAGCCCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCTGCA CGAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCAGCCCCGCCATTAAG AAGGGCATCCTGCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCG TGAAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCCGAGAACATCGTGAT CGAAATGGCCAGAGAGAACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAG AAGAACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGAAGAGGGCA TCAAAGAGCTGGGCAGCCAGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGT GGAAAACACCCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAAGCTGTACCTGTAC TACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGGATATGTACGTGGACCAGGAAC TGGACATCAACCGGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACCATAT CGTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAAGGACGACTCCATCGACAAC AAGGTGCTGACCAGAAGCGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAGAGCG ACAACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGAAGATGAAGAA CTACTGGCGGCAGCTGCTGAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAG AGAAAGTTCGACAATCTGACCAAGGCCGAGAGAGGCGGCC TGAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGCTTCATCAAGAGACAGCT GGTGGAAACCCGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGATC CTGGACTCCCGGATGAACACTAAGTACGACGAGAATGACA AGCTGATCCGGGAAGTGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCAA GCTGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGTTTTACAAA GTGCGCGAGATCAACAACTACCACCACGCCCACGACGCCT ACCTGAACGCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATCAAAAAGTA CCCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGACTACAAG GTGTACGACGTGCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGG AAATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCCAAGTACTTCTTCTACAGCAA CATCATGAACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCAAC GGCGAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAAACGGCG AAACCGGGGAGATCGTGTGGGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGC CACCGTGCGGAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAAGTGAATATC GTGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCAGCAAAG AGTCTATCCTGCCCAAGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGC CAGAAAGAAGGACTGGGACCCTAAGAAGTACGGCGGCTTC GACAGCCCCACCGTGGCCTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGCCA AAGTGGAAAAGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAA AGAGCTGCTGGGGATCACCATCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTC GAGAAGAATCCCATCGACTTTCTGGAAGCCAAGGGCTACA AAGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCTAAGTA CTCCCTGTTCGAGCTGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTG GCCTCTGCCGGCGAACTGCAGAAGGGAAACGAACTGGCCC TGCCCTCCAAATATGTGAACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGCCA CTATGAGAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAG AAACAGCTGTTTGTGGAACAGCACAAGCACTACCTGGACG AGATCATCGAGCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAGAGAGTGAT CCTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGCCTAC AACAAGCACCGGGATAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGA ATATCATCCACCTGTTTACCCTGACCAATCTGGGAGCCCC TGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACCATCGACCGGAAG AGGTACACCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGA TCCACCAGAGCATCACCGGCCTGTACGAGACACGGATCGA CCTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCGACAAAAGGCCGGCGGCCACG AAAAAGGCCGGCCAGGCAAAAAAGAAAAAG (SEQ ID NO: 116) Sp_del(312-409) ATGGACTATAAGGACCACGACGGAGACTACAAGGATCATG ATATTGATTACAAAGACGATGACGATAAG ATGGCCCCAAA GAAGAAGCGGAAGGTCGGTATCCACGGAGTCCCAGCAGCC GACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGACATCGGCACCAACT CTGTGGGCTGGGCCGTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCC CAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCAACACCGACCGGCAC AGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACA GCGGCGAAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGC CAGAAGAAGATACACCAGACGGAAGAACCGGATCTGCTAT CTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAGGTGGACG ACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGA AGAGGATAAGAAGCACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAAC ATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACGAGAAGTACCCCACCA TCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAA GGCCGACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATG ATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCACTTCCTGATCGAGGGCGACCTGA ACCCCGACAACAGCGACGTGGACAAGCTGTTCATCCAGCT GGTGCAGACCTACAACCAGCTGTTCGAGGAAAACCCCATC AACGCCAGCGGCGTGGACGCCAAGGCCATCCTGTCTGCCA GACTGAGCAAGAGCAGACGGCTGGAAAATCTGATCGCCCA GCTGCCCGGCGAGAAGAAGAATGGCCTGTTCGGAAACCTG ATTGCCCTGAGCCTGGGCCTGACCCCCAACTTCAAGAGCA ACTTCGACCTGGCCGAGGATGCCAAACTGCAGCTGAGCAA GGACACCTACGACGACGACCTGGACAACCTGCTGGCCCAG ATCGGCGACCAGTACGCCGACCTGTTTCTGGCCGCCAAGA ACCTGTCCGACGCCATCCTGCTGAGCGACATCCTGAGAGT GAACACCGAGATCCCCCACCAGATCCACCTGGGAGAGCTG CACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATTTTTACCCATTCC TGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTT CCGCATCCCCTACTACGTGGGCCCTCTGGCCAGGGGAAAC AGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACCAGAAAGAGCGAGGAAACCA TCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAAGGGCGC TTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGATGACCAACTTCGAT AAGAACCTGCCCAACGAGAAGGTGCTGCCCAAGCACAGCC TGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTATAACGAGCTGACCAA AGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAATGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTC CTGAGCGGCGAGCAGAAAAAGGCCATCGTGGACCTGCTGT TCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTGAAGCAGCTGAAAGA GGACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCTTCGACTCCGTGGAA ATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCAACGCCTCCCTGGGCA CATACCACGATCTGCTGAAAATTATCAAGGACAAGGACTT CCTGGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGACATTCTGGAAGATATC GTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGAGGACAGAGAGATGATCG AGGAACGGCTGAAAACCTATGCCCACCTGTTCGACGACAA AGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGAGATACACCGGCTGG GGCAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGCTGATCAACGGCATCCGGGACA AGCAGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGATTTCCTGAAGTCCGA CGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAACTTCATGCAGCTGATCCACGAC GACAGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAGAAAGCCCAGG TGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCTGCACGAGCACATTGCCAA TCTGGCCGGCAGCCCCGCCATTAAGAAGGGCATCCTGCAG ACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGTGAAAGTGATGGGCC GGCACAAGCCCGAGAACATCGTGATCGAAATGGCCAGAGA GAACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAGAAGAACAGCCGCGAG AGAATGAAGCGGATCGAAGAGGGCATCAAAGAGCTGGGCA GCCAGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGTGGAAAACACCCAGCT GCAGAACGAGAAGCTGTACCTGTACTACCTGCAGAATGGG CGGGATATGTACGTGGACCAGGAACTGGACATCAACCGGC TGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACCATATCGTGCCTCAGAGCTT TCTGAAGGACGACTCCATCGACAACAAGGTGCTGACCAGA AGCGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAGAGCGACAACGTGCCCTCCG AAGAGGTCGTGAAGAAGATGAAGAACTACTGGCGGCAGCT GCTGAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGAGAAAGTTCGACAAT CTGACCAAGGCCGAGAGAGGCGGCCTGAGCGAACTGGATA AGGCCGGCTTCATCAAGAGACAGCTGGTGGAAACCCGGCA GATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGATCCTGGACTCCCGGATG AACACTAAGTACGACGAGAATGACAAGCTGATCCGGGAAG TGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCAAGCTGGTGTCCGATTT CCGGAAGGATTTCCAGTTTTACAAAGTGCGCGAGATCAAC AACTACCACCACGCCCACGACGCCTACCTGAACGCCGTCG TGGGAACCGCCCTGATCAAAAAGTACCCTAAGCTGGAAAG CGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGACTACAAGGTGTACGACGTGCGG AAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGGAAATCGGCAAGGCTA CCGCCAAGTACTTCTTCTACAGCAACATCATGAACTTTTT CAAGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCAACGGCGAGATCCGGAAG CGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAAACGGCGAAACCGGGGAGATCG TGTGGGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGTGCGGAAAGT GCTGAGCATGCCCCAAGTGAATATCGTGAAAAAGACCGAG GTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCAGCAAAGAGTCTATCCTGCCCA AGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCCAGAAAGAAGGACTG GGACCCTAAGAAGTACGGCGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGTG GCCTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGCCAAAGTGGAAAAGGGCA AGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAAGAGCTGCTGGGGAT CACCATCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAATCCCATC GACTTTCTGGAAGCCAAGGGCTACAAAGAAGTGAAAAAGG ACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCTAAGTACTCCCTGTTCGAGCT GGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGGCCTCTGCCGGCGAA CTGCAGAAGGGAAACGAACTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATG TGAACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGCCACTATGAGAAGCTGAA GGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAGAAACAGCTGTTTGTG GAACAGCACAAGCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCGAGCAGA TCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAGAGAGTGATCCTGGCCGACGCTAA TCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGCCTACAACAAGCACCGGGAT AAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAATATCATCCACCTGT TTACCCTGACCAATCTGGGAGCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTA CTTTGACACCACCATCGACCGGAAGAGGTACACCAGCACC AAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGATCCACCAGAGCATCA CCGGCCTGTACGAGACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCTGGG AGGCGACAAAAGGCCGGCGGCCACGAAAAAGGCCGGCCAG GCAAAAAAGAAAAAG (SEQ ID NO: 117) Sp_del (1098-end) ATGGACTATAAGGACCACGACGGAGACTACAAGGATCATG ATATTGATTACAAAGACGATGACGATAAG ATGGCCCCAAA GAAGAAGCGGAAGGTCGGTATCCACGGAGTCCCAGCAGCC GACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGACATCGGCACCAACT CTGTGGGCTGGGCCGTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCC CAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCAACACCGACCGGCAC AGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACA GCGGCGAAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGC CAGAAGAAGATACACCAGACGGAAGAACCGGATCTGCTAT CTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAGGTGGACG ACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGA AGAGGATAAGAAGCACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAAC ATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACGAGAAGTACCCCACCA TCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAA GGCCGACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATG ATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCACTTCCTGATCGAGGGCGACCTGA ACCCCGACAACAGCGACGTGGACAAGCTGTTCATCCAGCT GGTGCAGACCTACAACCAGCTGTTCGAGGAAAACCCCATC AACGCCAGCGGCGTGGACGCCAAGGCCATCCTGTCTGCCA GACTGAGCAAGAGCAGACGGCTGGAAAATCTGATCGCCCA GCTGCCCGGCGAGAAGAAGAATGGCCTGTTCGGAAACCTG ATTGCCCTGAGCCTGGGCCTGACCCCCAACTTCAAGAGCA ACTTCGACCTGGCCGAGGATGCCAAACTGCAGCTGAGCAA GGACACCTACGACGACGACCTGGACAACCTGCTGGCCCAG ATCGGCGACCAGTACGCCGACCTGTTTCTGGCCGCCAAGA ACCTGTCCGACGCCATCCTGCTGAGCGACATCCTGAGAGT GAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCCCTGAGCGCCTCTATG ATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGC TGAAAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAA AGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAGAGCAAGAACGGCTACGCCGGC TACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTACAAGT TCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGA ACTGCTCGTGAAGCTGAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAAG CAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATCCCCCACCAGATCC ACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGA TTTTTACCCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGAG AAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCATCCCCTACTACGTGGGCCCTC TGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACCAGAAA GAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTG GTGGACAAGGGCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGA TGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCAACGAGAAGGTGCT GCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTAT AACGAGCTGACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAATGA GAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCGAGCAGAAAAAGGCCAT CGTGGACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTG AAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCT TCGACTCCGTGGAAATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCAA CGCCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAAAATTATC AAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGACA TTCTGGAAGATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGAGGA CAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTGAAAACCTATGCCCAC CTGTTCGACGACAAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGA GATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGCTGATCAA CGGCATCCGGGACAAGCAGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGAT TTCCTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAACTTCATGC AGCTGATCCACGACGACAGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACAT CCAGAAAGCCCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCTGCAC GAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCAGCCCCGCCATTAAGA AGGGCATCCTGCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGT GAAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCCGAGAACATCGTGATC GAAATGGCCAGAGAGAACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAGA AGAACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGAAGAGGGCAT CAAAGAGCTGGGCAGCCAGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGTG GAAAACACCCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAAGCTGTACCTGTACT ACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGGATATGTACGTGGACCAGGAACT GGACATCAACCGGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACCATATC GTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAAGGACGACTCCATCGACAACA AGGTGCTGACCAGAAGCGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAGAGCGA CAACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGAAGATGAAGAAC TACTGGCGGCAGCTGCTGAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGA GAAAGTTCGACAATCTGACCAAGGCCGAGAGAGGCGGCCT GAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGCTTCATCAAGAGACAGCTG GTGGAAACCCGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGATCC TGGACTCCCGGATGAACACTAAGTACGACGAGAATGACAA GCTGATCCGGGAAGTGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCAAG CTGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGTTTTACAAAG TGCGCGAGATCAACAACTACCACCACGCCCACGACGCCTA CCTGAACGCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATCAAAAAGTAC CCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGACTACAAGG TGTACGACGTGCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGGA AATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCCAAGTACTTCTTCTACAGCAAC ATCATGAACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCAACG GCGAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAAACGGCGA AACCGGGGAGATCGTGTGGGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCC ACCGTGCGGAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAAGTGAATATCG TGAAAAAGACCAAAAGGCCGGCGGCCACGAAAAAGGCCGG CCAGGCAAAAAAGAAAAAG (SEQ ID NO: 118) St3Cas9 ATGGACTATAAGGACCACGACGGAGACTACAAGGATCATG ATATTGATTACAAAGACGATGACGATAAG ATGGCCCCAAA GAAGAAGCGGAAGGTCGGTATCCACGGAGTCCCAGCAGCC ACCAAGCCCTACAGCATCGGCCTGGACATCGGCACCAATA GCGTGGGCTGGGCCGTGACCACCGACAACTACAAGGTGCC CAGCAAGAAAATGAAGGTGCTGGGCAACACCTCCAAGAAG TACATCAAGAAAAACCTGCTGGGCGTGCTGCTGTTCGACA GCGGCATTACAGCCGAGGGCAGACGGCTGAAGAGAACCGC CAGACGGCGGTACACCCGGCGGAGAAACAGAATCCTGTAT CTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCACCGAGATGGCTACCCTGGACG ACGCCTTCTTCCAGCGGCTGGACGACAGCTTCCTGGTGCC CGACGACAAGCGGGACAGCAAGTACCCCATCTTCGGCAAC CTGGTGGAAGAGAAGGCCTACCACGACGAGTTCCCCACCA TCTACCACCTGAGAAAGTACCTGGCCGACAGCACCAAGAA GGCCGACCTGAGACTGGTGTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATG ATCAAGTACCGGGGCCACTTCCTGATCGAGGGCGAGTTCA ACAGCAAGAACAACGACATCCAGAAGAACTTCCAGGACTT CCTGGACACCTACAACGCCATCTTCGAGAGCGACCTGTCC CTGGAAAACAGCAAGCAGCTGGAAGAGATCGTGAAGGACA AGATCAGCAAGCTGGAAAAGAAGGACCGCATCCTGAAGCT GTTCCCCGGCGAGAAGAACAGCGGAATCTTCAGCGAGTTT CTGAAGCTGATCGTGGGCAACCAGGCCGACTTCAGAAAGT GCTTCAACCTGGACGAGAAAGCCAGCCTGCACTTCAGCAA AGAGAGCTACGACGAGGACCTGGAAACCCTGCTGGGATAT ATCGGCGACGACTACAGCGACGTGTTCCTGAAGGCCAAGA AGCTGTACGACGCTATCCTGCTGAGCGGCTTCCTGACCGT GACCGACAACGAGACAGAGGCCCCACTGAGCAGCGCCATG ATTAAGCGGTACAACGAGCACAAAGAGGATCTGGCTCTGC TGAAAGAGTACATCCGGAACATCAGCCTGAAAACCTACAA TGAGGTGTTCAAGGACGACACCAAGAACGGCTACGCCGGC TACATCGACGGCAAGACCAACCAGGAAGAGGAAGATTTCT ATGTGTACCTGAAGAAGCTGCTGGCCGAGTTCGAGGGGGC CGACTACTTTCTGGAAAAAATCGACCGCGAGGATTTCCTG CGGAAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATCCCCTACC AGATCCATCTGCAGGAAATGCGGGCCATCCTGGACAAGCA GGCCAAGTTCTACCCATTCCTGGCCAAGAACAAAGAGCGG ATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCATCCCTTACTACGTGG GCCCCCTGGCCAGAGGCAACAGCGATTTTGCCTGGTCCAT CCGGAAGCGCAATGAGAAGATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAG GACGTGATCGACAAAGAGTCCAGCGCCGAGGCCTTCATCA ACCGGATGACCAGCTTCGACCTGTACCTGCCCGAGGAAAA GGTGCTGCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGACATTCAAT GTGTATAACGAGCTGACCAAAGTGCGGTTTATCGCCGAGT CTATGCGGGACTACCAGTTCCTGGACTCCAAGCAGAAAAA GGACATCGTGCGGCTGTACTTCAAGGACAAGCGGAAAGTG ACCGATAAGGACATCATCGAGTACCTGCACGCCATCTACG GCTACGATGGCATCGAGCTGAAGGGCATCGAGAAGCAGTT CAACTCCAGCCTGAGCACATACCACGACCTGCTGAACATT ATCAACGACAAAGAATTTCTGGACGACTCCAGCAACGAGG CCATCATCGAAGAGATCATCCACACCCTGACCATCTTTGA GGACCGCGAGATGATCAAGCAGCGGCTGAGCAAGTTCGAG AACATCTTCGACAAGAGCGTGCTGAAAAAGCTGAGCAGAC GGCACTACACCGGCTGGGGCAAGCTGAGCGCCAAGCTGAT CAACGGCATCCGGGACGAGAAGTCCGGCAACACAATCCTG GACTACCTGATCGACGACGGCATCAGCAACCGGAACTTCA TGCAGCTGATCCACGACGACGCCCTGAGCTTCAAGAAGAA GATCCAGAAGGCCCAGATCATCGGGGACGAGGACAAGGGC AACATCAAAGAAGTCGTGAAGTCCCTGCCCGGCAGCCCCG CCATCAAGAAGGGAATCCTGCAGAGCATCAAGATCGTGGA CGAGCTCGTGAAAGTGATGGGCGGCAGAAAGCCCGAGAGC ATCGTGGTGGTGGTGGAAATGGCTAGAGAGAACCAGTACA CCAATCAGGGCAAGAGCAACAGCCAGCAGAGACTGAAGAG ACTGGAAAAGTCCCTGAAAGAGCTGGGCAGCAAGATTCTG AAAGAGAATATCCCTGCCAAGCTGTCCAAGATCGACAACA ACGCCCTGCAGAACGACCGGCTGTACCTGTACTACCTGCA GAATGGCAAGGACATGTATACAGGCGACGACCTGGATATC GACCGCCTGAGCAACTACGACATCGACCATATTATCCCCC AGGCCTTCCTGAAAGACAACAGCATTGACAACAAAGTGCT GGTGTCCTCCGCCAGCAACCGCGGCAAGTCCGATGATGTG CCCAGCCTGGAAGTCGTGAAAAAGAGAAAGACCTTCTGGT ATCAGCTGCTGAAAAGCAAGCTGATTAGCCAGAGGAAGTT CGACAACCTGACCAAGGCCGAGAGAGGCGGCCTGAGCCCT GAAGATAAGGCCGGCTTCATCCAGAGACAGCTGGTGGAAA CCCGGCAGATCACCAAGCACGTGGCCAGACTGCTGGATGA GAAGTTTAACAACAAGAAGGACGAGAACAACCGGGCCGTG CGGACCGTGAAGATCATCACCCTGAAGTCCACCCTGGTGT CCCAGTTCCGGAAGGACTTCGAGCTGTATAAAGTGCGCGA GATCAATGACTTTCACCACGCCCACGACGCCTACCTGAAT GCCGTGGTGGCTTCCGCCCTGCTGAAGAAGTACCCTAAGC TGGAACCCGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGACTACCCCAAGTACAA CTCCTTCAGAGAGCGGAAGTCCGCCACCGAGAAGGTGTAC TTCTACTCCAACATCATGAATATCTTTAAGAAGTCCATCT CCCTGGCCGATGGCAGAGTGATCGAGCGGCCCCTGATCGA AGTGAACGAAGAGACAGGCGAGAGCGTGTGGAACAAAGAA AGCGACCTGGCCACCGTGCGGCGGGTGCTGAGTTATCCTC AAGTGAATGTCGTGAAGAAGGTGGAAGAACAGAACCACGG CCTGGATCGGGGCAAGCCCAAGGGCCTGTTCAACGCCAAC CTGTCCAGCAAGCCTAAGCCCAACTCCAACGAGAATCTCG TGGGGGCCAAAGAGTACCTGGACCCTAAGAAGTACGGGTA CGGCGGATACGCCGGCATCTCCAATAGCTTCACCGTGCTC GTGAAGGGCACAATCGAGAAGGGCGCTAAGAAAAAGATCA CAAACGTGCTGGAATTTCAGGGGATCTCTATCCTGGACCG GATCAACTACCGGAAGGATAAGCTGAACTTTCTGCTGGAA AAAGGCTACAAGGACATTGAGCTGATTATCGAGCTGCCTA AGTACTCCCTGTTCGAACTGAGCGACGGCTCCAGACGGAT GCTGGCCTCCATCCTGTCCACCAACAACAAGCGGGGCGAG ATCCACAAGGGAAACCAGATCTTCCTGAGCCAGAAATTTG TGAAACTGCTGTACCACGCCAAGCGGATCTCCAACACCAT CAATGAGAACCACCGGAAATACGTGGAAAACCACAAGAAA GAGTTTGAGGAACTGTTCTACTACATCCTGGAGTTCAACG AGAACTATGTGGGAGCCAAGAAGAACGGCAAACTGCTGAA CTCCGCCTTCCAGAGCTGGCAGAACCACAGCATCGACGAG CTGTGCAGCTCCTTCATCGGCCCTACCGGCAGCGAGCGGA AGGGACTGTTTGAGCTGACCTCCAGAGGCTCTGCCGCCGA CTTTGAGTTCCTGGGAGTGAAGATCCCCCGGTACAGAGAC TACACCCCCTCTAGTCTGCTGAAGGACGCCACCCTGATCC ACCAGAGCGTGACCGGCCTGTACGAAACCCGGATCGACCT GGCTAAGCTGGGCGAGGGAAAAAGGCCGGCGGCCACGAAA AAGGCCGGCCAGGCAAAAAAGAAAAAG (SEQ ID NO: 119) SpCas9(C80L, C574A) ATGGACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGACATCGGCACCA ACTCTGTGGGCTGGGCCGTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGT GCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCAACACCGACCGG CACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCG ACAGCGGCGAAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAAC CGCCAGAAGAAGATACACCAGACGGAAGAACCGGATCctg TATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAGGTGG ACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGT GGAAGAGGATAAGAAGCACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGC AACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACGAGAAGTACCCCA CCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGA CAAGGCCGACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCAC ATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCACTTCCTGATCGAGGGCGACC TGAACCCCGACAACAGCGACGTGGACAAGCTGTTCATCCA GCTGGTGCAGACCTACAACCAGCTGTTCGAGGAAAACCCC ATCAACGCCAGCGGCGTGGACGCCAAGGCCATCCTGTCTG CCAGACTGAGCAAGAGCAGACGGCTGGAAAATCTGATCGC CCAGCTGCCCGGCGAGAAGAAGAATGGCCTGTTCGGAAAC CTGATTGCCCTGAGCCTGGGCCTGACCCCCAACTTCAAGA GCAACTTCGACCTGGCCGAGGATGCCAAACTGCAGCTGAG CAAGGACACCTACGACGACGACCTGGACAACCTGCTGGCC CAGATCGGCGACCAGTACGCCGACCTGTTTCTGGCCGCCA AGAACCTGTCCGACGCCATCCTGCTGAGCGACATCCTGAG AGTGAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCCCTGAGCGCCTCT ATGATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCC TGCTGAAAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTA CAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAGAGCAAGAACGGCTACGCC GGCTACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTACA AGTTCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGA GGAACTGCTCGTGAAGCTGAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGG AAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATCCCCCACCAGA TCCACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGA AGATTTTTACCCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGATC GAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCATCCCCTACTACGTGGGCC CTCTGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACCAG AAAGAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAA GTGGTGGACAAGGGCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGC GGATGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCAACGAGAAGGT GCTGCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTG TATAACGAGCTGACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAA TGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCGAGCAGAAAAAGGC CATCGTGGACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACC GTGAAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGg agTTCGACTCCGTGGAAATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTT CAACGCCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAAAATT ATCAAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGG ACATTCTGGAAGATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGA GGACAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTGAAAACCTATGCC CACCTGTTCGACGACAAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGC GGAGATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGCTGAT CAACGGCATCCGGGACAAGCAGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTG GATTTCCTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAACTTCA TGCAGCTGATCCACGACGACAGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGA CATCCAGAAAGCCCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCTG CACGAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCAGCCCCGCCATTA AGAAGGGCATCCTGCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCT CGTGAAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCCGAGAACATCGTG ATCGAAATGGCCAGAGAGAACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGAC AGAAGAACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGAAGAGGG CATCAAAGAGCTGGGCAGCCAGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCC GTGGAAAACACCCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAAGCTGTACCTGT ACTACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGGATATGTACGTGGACCAGGA ACTGGACATCAACCGGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACCAT ATCGTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAAGGACGACTCCATCGACA ACAAGGTGCTGACCAGAAGCGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAGAG CGACAACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGAAGATGAAG AACTACTGGCGGCAGCTGCTGAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCC AGAGAAAGTTCGACAATCTGACCAAGGCCGAGAGAGGCGG CCTGAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGCTTCATCAAGAGACAG CTGGTGGAAACCCGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGA TCCTGGACTCCCGGATGAACACTAAGTACGACGAGAATGA CAAGCTGATCCGGGAAGTGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCC AAGCTGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGTTTTACA AAGTGCGCGAGATCAACAACTACCACCACGCCCACGACGC CTACCTGAACGCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATCAAAAAG TACCCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGACTACA AGGTGTACGACGTGCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCA GGAAATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCCAAGTACTTCTTCTACAGC AACATCATGAACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCA ACGGCGAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAAACGG CGAAACCGGGGAGATCGTGTGGGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTT GCCACCGTGCGGAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAAGTGAATA TCGTGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCAGCAA AGAGTCTATCCTGCCCAAGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATC GCCAGAAAGAAGGACTGGGACCCTAAGAAGTACGGCGGCT TCGACAGCCCCACCGTGGCCTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGC CAAAGTGGAAAAGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTG AAAGAGCTGCTGGGGATCACCATCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCT TCGAGAAGAATCCCATCGACTTTCTGGAAGCCAAGGGCTA CAAAGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCTAAG TACTCCCTGTTCGAGCTGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGC TGGCCTCTGCCGGCGAACTGCAGAAGGGAAACGAACTGGC CCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTGAACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGC CACTATGAGAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGC AGAAACAGCTGTTTGTGGAACAGCACAAGCACTACCTGGA CGAGATCATCGAGCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAGAGAGTG ATCCTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGCCT ACAACAAGCACCGGGATAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGA GAATATCATCCACCTGTTTACCCTGACCAATCTGGGAGCC CCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACCATCGACCGGA AGAGGTACACCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCT GATCCACCAGAGCATCACCGGCCTGTACGAGACACGGATC GACCTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCGAC (SEQ ID NO: 120) Sp_St3 Cas9 chimera (St3 in bold) ATGGACTATAAGGACCACGACGGAGACTACAAGGATCATG ATATTGATTACAAAGACGATGACGATAAG ATGGCCCCAAA GAAGAAGCGGAAGGTCGGTATCCACGGAGTCCCAGCAGCC GACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGACATCGGCACCAACT CTGTGGGCTGGGCCGTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCC CAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCAACACCGACCGGCAC AGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACA GCGGCGAAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGC CAGAAGAAGATACACCAGACGGAAGAACCGGATCTGCTAT CTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAGGTGGACG ACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGA AGAGGATAAGAAGCACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAAC ATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACGAGAAGTACCCCACCA TCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAA GGCCGACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATG ATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCACTTCCTGATCGAGGGCGACCTGA ACCCCGACAACAGCGACGTGGACAAGCTGTTCATCCAGCT GGTGCAGACCTACAACCAGCTGTTCGAGGAAAACCCCATC AACGCCAGCGGCGTGGACGCCAAGGCCATCCTGTCTGCCA GACTGAGCAAGAGCAGACGGCTGGAAAATCTGATCGCCCA GCTGCCCGGCGAGAAGAAGAATGGCCTGTTCGGAAACCTG ATTGCCCTGAGCCTGGGCCTGACCCCCAACTTCAAGAGCA ACTTCGACCTGGCCGAGGATGCCAAACTGCAGCTGAGCAA GGACACCTACGACGACGACCTGGACAACCTGCTGGCCCAG ATCGGCGACCAGTACGCCGACCTGTTTCTGGCCGCCAAGA ACCTGTCCGACGCCATCCTGCTGAGCGACATCCTGAGAGT GAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCCCTGAGCGCCTCTATG ATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGC TGAAAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAA AGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAGAGCAAGAACGGCTACGCCGGC TACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTACAAGT TCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGA ACTGCTCGTGAAGCTGAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAAG CAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATCCCCCACCAGATCC ACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGA TTTTTACCCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGAG AAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCATCCCCTACTACGTGGGCCCTC TGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACCAGAAA GAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTG GTGGACAAGGGCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGA TGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCAACGAGAAGGTGCT GCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTAT AACGAGCTGACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAATGA GAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCGAGCAGAAAAAGGCCAT CGTGGACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTG AAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCT TCGACTCCGTGGAAATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCAA CGCCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAAAATTATC AAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGACA TTCTGGAAGATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGAGGA CAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTGAAAACCTATGCCCAC CTGTTCGACGACAAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGA GATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGCTGATCAA CGGCATCCGGGACAAGCAGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGAT TTCCTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAACTTCATGC AGCTGATCCACGACGACAGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACAT CCAGAAAGCCCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCTGCAC GAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCAGCCCCGCCATTAAGA AGGGCATCCTGCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGT GAAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCCGAGAACATCGTGATC GAAATGGCCAGAGAGAACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAGA AGAACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGAAGAGGGCAT CAAAGAGCTGGGCAGCCAGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGTG GAAAACACCCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAAGCTGTACCTGTACT ACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGGATATGTACGTGGACCAGGAACT GGACATCAACCGGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACCATATC GTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAAGGACGACTCCATCGACAACA AGGTGCTGACCAGAAGCGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAGAGCGA CAACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGAAGATGAAGAAC TACTGGCGGCAGCTGCTGAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGA GAAAGTTCGACAATCTGACCAAGGCCGAGAGAGGCGGCCT GAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGCTTCATCAAGAGACAGCTG GTGGAAACCCGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGATCC TGGACTCCCGGATGAACACTAAGTACGACGAGAATGACAA GCTGATCCGGGAAGTGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCAAG CTGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGTTTTACAAAG TGCGCGAGATCAACAACTACCACCACGCCCACGACGCCTA CCTGAACGCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATCAAAAAGTAC CCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGACTACAAGG TGTACGACGTGCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGGA AATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCCAAGTACTTCTTCTACAGCAAC ATCATGAACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCAACG GCGAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAAACGGCGA AACCGGGGAGATCGTGTGGGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCC ACCGTGCGGAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAAGTGAATATCG TGAAAAAGACCGTGGAAGAACAGAACCACGGCCTGGATCG GGGCAAGCCCAAGGGCCTGTTCAACGCCAACCTGTCCAGC AAGCCTAAGCCCAACTCCAACGAGAATCTCGTGGGGGCCA AAGAGTACCTGGACCCTAAGAAGTACGGGTACGGCGGATA CGCCGGCATCTCCAATAGCTTCACCGTGCTCGTGAAGGGC ACAATCGAGAAGGGCGCTAAGAAAAAGATCACAAACGTGC TGGAATTTCAGGGGATCTCTATCCTGGACCGGATCAACTA CCGGAAGGATAAGCTGAACTTTCTGCTGGAAAAAGGCTAC AAGGACATTGAGCTGATTATCGAGCTGCCTAAGTACTCCC TGTTCGAACTGAGCGACGGCTCCAGACGGATGCTGGCCTC CATCCTGTCCACCAACAACAAGCGGGGCGAGATCCACAAG GGAAACCAGATCTTCCTGAGCCAGAAATTTGTGAAACTGC TGTACCACGCCAAGCGGATCTCCAACACCATCAATGAGAA CCACCGGAAATACGTGGAAAACCACAAGAAAGAGTTTGAG GAACTGTTCTACTACATCCTGGAGTTCAACGAGAACTATG TGGGAGCCAAGAAGAACGGCAAACTGCTGAACTCCGCCTT CCAGAGCTGGCAGAACCACAGCATCGACGAGCTGTGCAGC TCCTTCATCGGCCCTACCGGCAGCGAGCGGAAGGGACTGT TTGAGCTGACCTCCAGAGGCTCTGCCGCCGACTTTGAGTT CCTGGGAGTGAAGATCCCCCGGTACAGAGACTACACCCCC TCTAGTCTGCTGAAGGACGCCACCCTGATCCACCAGAGCG TGACCGGCCTGTACGAAACCCGGATCGACCTGGCTAAGCT GGGCGAGGGA AAAAGGCCGGCGGCCACGAAAAAGGCCGGC CAGGCAAAAAAGAAAAAG (SEQ ID NO: 121) St3_Sp Cas9 chimera (St3 in bold) ATGGCCCCAAAGAAGAAGCGGAAGGTCGGTATCCACGGAG TCCCAGCAGCC atgACCAAGCCCTACAGCATCGGCCTGGA CATCGGCACCAATAGCGTGGGCTGGGCCGTGACCACCGAC AACTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAAATGAAGGTGCTGGGCA ACACCTCCAAGAAGTACATCAAGAAAAACCTGCTGGGCGT GCTGCTGTTCGACAGCGGCATTACAGCCGAGGGCAGACGG CTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGACGGCGGTACACCCGGCGGAGAA ACAGAATCCTGTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCACCGAGAT GGCTACCCTGGACGACGCCTTCTTCCAGCGGCTGGACGAC AGCTTCCTGGTGCCCGACGACAAGCGGGACAGCAAGTACC CCATCTTCGGCAACCTGGTGGAAGAGAAGGCCTACCACGA CGAGTTCCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGTACCTGGCC GACAGCACCAAGAAGGCCGACCTGAGACTGGTGTATCTGG CCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTACCGGGGCCACTTCCTGAT CGAGGGCGAGTTCAACAGCAAGAACAACGACATCCAGAAG AACTTCCAGGACTTCCTGGACACCTACAACGCCATCTTCG AGAGCGACCTGTCCCTGGAAAACAGCAAGCAGCTGGAAGA GATCGTGAAGGACAAGATCAGCAAGCTGGAAAAGAAGGAC CGCATCCTGAAGCTGTTCCCCGGCGAGAAGAACAGCGGAA TCTTCAGCGAGTTTCTGAAGCTGATCGTGGGCAACCAGGC CGACTTCAGAAAGTGCTTCAACCTGGACGAGAAAGCCAGC CTGCACTTCAGCAAAGAGAGCTACGACGAGGACCTGGAAA CCCTGCTGGGATATATCGGCGACGACTACAGCGACGTGTT CCTGAAGGCCAAGAAGCTGTACGACGCTATCCTGCTGAGC GGCTTCCTGACCGTGACCGACAACGAGACAGAGGCCCCAC TGAGCAGCGCCATGATTAAGCGGTACAACGAGCACAAAGA GGATCTGGCTCTGCTGAAAGAGTACATCCGGAACATCAGC CTGAAAACCTACAATGAGGTGTTCAAGGACGACACCAAGA ACGGCTACGCCGGCTACATCGACGGCAAGACCAACCAGGA AGAGGAAGATTTCTATGTGTACCTGAAGAAGCTGCTGGCC GAGTTCGAGGGGGCCGACTACTTTCTGGAAAAAATCGACC GCGAGGATTTCCTGCGGAAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGG CAGCATCCCCTACCAGATCCATCTGCAGGAAATGCGGGCC ATCCTGGACAAGCAGGCCAAGTTCTACCCATTCCTGGCCA AGAACAAAGAGCGGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCAT CCCTTACTACGTGGGCCCCCTGGCCAGAGGCAACAGCGAT TTTGCCTGGTCCATCCGGAAGCGCAATGAGAAGATCACCC CCTGGAACTTCGAGGACGTGATCGACAAAGAGTCCAGCGC CGAGGCCTTCATCAACCGGATGACCAGCTTCGACCTGTAC CTGCCCGAGGAAAAGGTGCTGCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGT ACGAGACATTCAATGTGTATAACGAGCTGACCAAAGTGCG GTTTATCGCCGAGTCTATGCGGGACTACCAGTTCCTGGAC TCCAAGCAGAAAAAGGACATCGTGCGGCTGTACTTCAAGG ACAAGCGGAAAGTGACCGATAAGGACATCATCGAGTACCT GCACGCCATCTACGGCTACGATGGCATCGAGCTGAAGGGC ATCGAGAAGCAGTTCAACTCCAGCCTGAGCACATACCACG ACCTGCTGAACATTATCAACGACAAAGAATTTCTGGACGA CTCCAGCAACGAGGCCATCATCGAAGAGATCATCCACACC CTGACCATCTTTGAGGACCGCGAGATGATCAAGCAGCGGC TGAGCAAGTTCGAGAACATCTTCGACAAGAGCGTGCTGAA AAAGCTGAGCAGACGGCACTACACCGGCTGGGGCAAGCTG AGCGCCAAGCTGATCAACGGCATCCGGGACGAGAAGTCCG GCAACACAATCCTGGACTACCTGATCGACGACGGCATCAG CAACCGGAACTTCATGCAGCTGATCCACGACGACGCCCTG AGCTTCAAGAAGAAGATCCAGAAGGCCCAGATCATCGGGG ACGAGGACAAGGGCAACATCAAAGAAGTCGTGAAGTCCCT GCCCGGCAGCCCCGCCATCAAGAAGGGAATCCTGCAGAGC ATCAAGATCGTGGACGAGCTCGTGAAAGTGATGGGCGGCA GAAAGCCCGAGAGCATCGTGGTGGTGGTGGAAATGGCTAG AGAGAACCAGTACACCAATCAGGGCAAGAGCAACAGCCAG CAGAGACTGAAGAGACTGGAAAAGTCCCTGAAAGAGCTGG GCAGCAAGATTCTGAAAGAGAATATCCCTGCCAAGCTGTC CAAGATCGACAACAACGCCCTGCAGAACGACCGGCTGTAC CTGTACTACCTGCAGAATGGCAAGGACATGTATACAGGCG ACGACCTGGATATCGACCGCCTGAGCAACTACGACATCGA CCATATTATCCCCCAGGCCTTCCTGAAAGACAACAGCATT GACAACAAAGTGCTGGTGTCCTCCGCCAGCAACCGCGGCA AGTCCGATGATGTGCCCAGCCTGGAAGTCGTGAAAAAGAG AAAGACCTTCTGGTATCAGCTGCTGAAAAGCAAGCTGATT AGCCAGAGGAAGTTCGACAACCTGACCAAGGCCGAGAGAG GCGGCCTGAGCCCTGAAGATAAGGCCGGCTTCATCCAGAG ACAGCTGGTGGAAACCCGGCAGATCACCAAGCACGTGGCC AGACTGCTGGATGAGAAGTTTAACAACAAGAAGGACGAGA ACAACCGGGCCGTGCGGACCGTGAAGATCATCACCCTGAA GTCCACCCTGGTGTCCCAGTTCCGGAAGGACTTCGAGCTG TATAAAGTGCGCGAGATCAATGACTTTCACCACGCCCACG ACGCCTACCTGAATGCCGTGGTGGCTTCCGCCCTGCTGAA GAAGTACCCTAAGCTGGAACCCGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGAC TACCCCAAGTACAACTCCTTCAGAGAGCGGAAGTCCGCCA CCGAGAAGGTGTACTTCTACTCCAACATCATGAATATCTT TAAGAAGTCCATCTCCCTGGCCGATGGCAGAGTGATCGAG CGGCCCCTGATCGAAGTGAACGAAGAGACAGGCGAGAGCG TGTGGAACAAAGAAAGCGACCTGGCCACCGTGCGGCGGGT GCTGAGTTATCCTCAAGTGAATGTCGTGAAGAAGACCGAG GTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCAGCAAAGAGTCTATCCTGCCCA AGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCCAGAAAGAAGGACTG GGACCCTAAGAAGTACGGCGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGTG GCCTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGCCAAAGTGGAAAAGGGCA AGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAAGAGCTGCTGGGGAT CACCATCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAATCCCATC GACTTTCTGGAAGCCAAGGGCTACAAAGAAGTGAAAAAGG ACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCTAAGTACTCCCTGTTCGAGCT GGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGGCCTCTGCCGGCGAA CTGCAGAAGGGAAACGAACTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATG TGAACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGCCACTATGAGAAGCTGAA GGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAGAAACAGCTGTTTGTG GAACAGCACAAGCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCGAGCAGA TCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAGAGAGTGATCCTGGCCGACGCTAA TCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGCCTACAACAAGCACCGGGAT AAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAATATCATCCACCTGT TTACCCTGACCAATCTGGGAGCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTA CTTTGACACCACCATCGACCGGAAGAGGTACACCAGCACC AAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGATCCACCAGAGCATCA CCGGCCTGTACGAGACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCTGGG AGGCGACAAAAGGCCGGCGGCCACGAAAAAGGCCGGCCAG GCAAAAAAGAAAAAG (SEQ ID NO: 122) SpCas9 nickases Mutated residues (changed to GCC) bolded in order: D10, E762, N863, H983, D986 ATGGACTATAAGGACCACGACGGAGACTACAAGGATCATG ATATTGATTACAAAGACGATGACGATAAG ATGGCCCCAAA GAAGAAGCGGAAGGTCGGTATCCACGGAGTCCCAGCAGCC GACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGACATCGGCACCAACT CTGTGGGCTGGGCCGTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCC CAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCAACACCGACCGGCAC AGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACA GCGGCGAAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGC CAGAAGAAGATACACCAGACGGAAGAACCGGATCTGCTAT CTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAGGTGGACG ACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGA AGAGGATAAGAAGCACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAAC ATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACGAGAAGTACCCCACCA TCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAA GGCCGACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATG ATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCACTTCCTGATCGAGGGCGACCTGA ACCCCGACAACAGCGACGTGGACAAGCTGTTCATCCAGCT GGTGCAGACCTACAACCAGCTGTTCGAGGAAAACCCCATC AACGCCAGCGGCGTGGACGCCAAGGCCATCCTGTCTGCCA GACTGAGCAAGAGCAGACGGCTGGAAAATCTGATCGCCCA GCTGCCCGGCGAGAAGAAGAATGGCCTGTTCGGCAACCTG ATTGCCCTGAGCCTGGGCCTGACCCCCAACTTCAAGAGCA ACTTCGACCTGGCCGAGGATGCCAAACTGCAGCTGAGCAA GGACACCTACGACGACGACCTGGACAACCTGCTGGCCCAG ATCGGCGACCAGTACGCCGACCTGTTTCTGGCCGCCAAGA ACCTGTCCGACGCCATCCTGCTGAGCGACATCCTGAGAGT GAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCCCTGAGCGCCTCTATG ATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGC TGAAAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAA AGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAGAGCAAGAACGGCTACGCCGGC TACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTACAAGT TCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGA ACTGCTCGTGAAGCTGAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAAG CAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATCCCCCACCAGATCC ACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGA TTTTTACCCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGAG AAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCATCCCCTACTACGTGGGCCCTC TGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACCAGAAA GAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTG GTGGACAAGGGCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGA TGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCAACGAGAAGGTGCT GCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTAT AACGAGCTGACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAATGA GAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCGAGCAGAAAAAGGCCAT CGTGGACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTG AAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCT TCGACTCCGTGGAAATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCAA CGCCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAAAATTATC AAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGACA TTCTGGAAGATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGAGGA CAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTGAAAACCTATGCCCAC CTGTTCGACGACAAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGA GATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGCTGATCAA CGGCATCCGGGACAAGCAGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGAT TTCCTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAACTTCATGC AGCTGATCCACGACGACAGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACAT CCAGAAAGCCCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCTGCAC GAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCAGCCCCGCCATTAAGA AGGGCATCCTGCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGT GAAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCCGAGAACATCGTGATC GAAATGGCCAGAGAGAACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAGA AGAACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGAAGAGGGCAT CAAAGAGCTGGGCAGCCAGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGTG GAAAACACCCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAAGCTGTACCTGTACT ACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGGATATGTACGTGGACCAGGAACT GGACATCAACCGGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACCATATC GTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAAGGACGACTCCATCGACAACA AGGTGCTGACCAGAAGCGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAGAGCGA CAACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGAAGATGAAGAAC TACTGGCGGCAGCTGCTGAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGA GAAAGTTCGACAATCTGACCAAGGCCGAGAGAGGCGGCCT GAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGCTTCATCAAGAGACAGCTG GTGGAAACCCGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGATCC TGGACTCCCGGATGAACACTAAGTACGACGAGAATGACAA GCTGATCCGGGAAGTGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCAAG CTGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGTTTTACAAAG TGCGCGAGATCAACAACTACCACCACGCCCACGACGCCTA CCTGAACGCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATCAAAAAGTAC CCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGACTACAAGG TGTACGACGTGCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGGA AATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCCAAGTACTTCTTCTACAGCAAC ATCATGAACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCAACG GCGAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAAACGGCGA AACCGGGGAGATCGTGTGGGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCC ACCGTGCGGAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAAGTGAATATCG TGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCAGCAAAGA GTCTATCCTGCCCAAGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCC AGAAAGAAGGACTGGGACCCTAAGAAGTACGGCGGCTTCG ACAGCCCCACCGTGGCCTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGCCAA AGTGGAAAAGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAA GAGCTGCTGGGGATCACCATCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCG AGAAGAATCCCATCGACTTTCTGGAAGCCAAGGGCTACAA AGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCTAAGTAC TCCCTGTTCGAGCTGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGG CCTCTGCCGGCGAACTGCAGAAGGGAAACGAACTGGCCCT GCCCTCCAAATATGTGAACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGCCAC TATGAGAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAGA AACAGCTGTTTGTGGAACAGCACAAGCACTACCTGGACGA GATCATCGAGCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAGAGAGTGATC CTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGCCTACA ACAAGCACCGGGATAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAA TATCATCCACCTGTTTACCCTGACCAATCTGGGAGCCCCT GCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACCATCGACCGGAAGA GGTACACCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGAT CCACCAGAGCATCACCGGCCTGTACGAGACACGGATCGAC CTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCGACAAAAGGCCGGCGGCCACGA AAAAGGCCGGCCAGGCAAAAAAGAAAAAG (SEQ ID NO: 123) SpCas9 point mutants Mutated residues (changed to GCC) bolded in order: R63A, R66A, R69A, R70A, R74A, R75A, R78A, K163A, R165A, K510A ATGGACTATAAGGACCACGACGGAGACTACAAGGATCATG ATATTGATTACAAAGACGATGACGATAAG ATGGCCCCAAA GAAGAAGCGGAAGGTCGGTATCCACGGAGTCCCAGCAGCC GACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGACATCGGCACCAACT CTGTGGGCTGGGCCGTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCC CAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCAACACCGACCGGCAC AGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACA GCGGCGAAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGC CAGAAGAAGATACACCAGACGGAAGAACCGGATCTGCTAT CTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAGGTGGACG ACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGA AGAGGATAAGAAGCACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAAC ATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACGAGAAGTACCCCACCA TCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAA GGCCGACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATG ATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCACTTCCTGATCGAGGGCGACCTGA ACCCCGACAACAGCGACGTGGACAAGCTGTTCATCCAGCT GGTGCAGACCTACAACCAGCTGTTCGAGGAAAACCCCATC AACGCCAGCGGCGTGGACGCCAAGGCCATCCTGTCTGCCA GACTGAGCAAGAGCAGACGGCTGGAAAATCTGATCGCCCA GCTGCCCGGCGAGAAGAAGAATGGCCTGTTCGGCAACCTG ATTGCCCTGAGCCTGGGCCTGACCCCCAACTTCAAGAGCA ACTTCGACCTGGCCGAGGATGCCAAACTGCAGCTGAGCAA GGACACCTACGACGACGACCTGGACAACCTGCTGGCCCAG ATCGGCGACCAGTACGCCGACCTGTTTCTGGCCGCCAAGA ACCTGTCCGACGCCATCCTGCTGAGCGACATCCTGAGAGT GAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCCCTGAGCGCCTCTATG ATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGC TGAAAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAA AGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAGAGCAAGAACGGCTACGCCGGC TACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTACAAGT TCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGA ACTGCTCGTGAAGCTGAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAAG CAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATCCCCCACCAGATCC ACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGA TTTTTACCCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGAG AAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCATCCCCTACTACGTGGGCCCTC TGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACCAGAAA GAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTG GTGGACAAGGGCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGA TGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCAACGAGAAGGTGCT GCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTAT AACGAGCTGACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAATGA GAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCGAGCAGAAAAAGGCCAT CGTGGACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTG AAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCT TCGACTCCGTGGAAATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCAA CGCCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAAAATTATC AAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGACA TTCTGGAAGATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGAGGA CAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTGAAAACCTATGCCCAC CTGTTCGACGACAAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGA GATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGCTGATCAA CGGCATCCGGGACAAGCAGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGAT TTCCTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAACTTCATGC AGCTGATCCACGACGACAGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACAT CCAGAAAGCCCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCTGCAC GAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCAGCCCCGCCATTAAGA AGGGCATCCTGCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGT GAAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCCGAGAACATCGTGATC GAAATGGCCAGAGAGAACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAGA AGAACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGAAGAGGGCAT CAAAGAGCTGGGCAGCCAGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGTG GAAAACACCCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAAGCTGTACCTGTACT ACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGGATATGTACGTGGACCAGGAACT GGACATCAACCGGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACCATATC GTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAAGGACGACTCCATCGACAACA AGGTGCTGACCAGAAGCGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAGAGCGA CAACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGAAGATGAAGAAC TACTGGCGGCAGCTGCTGAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGA GAAAGTTCGACAATCTGACCAAGGCCGAGAGAGGCGGCCT GAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGCTTCATCAAGAGACAGCTG GTGGAAACCCGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGATCC TGGACTCCCGGATGAACACTAAGTACGACGAGAATGACAA GCTGATCCGGGAAGTGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCAAG CTGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGTTTTACAAAG TGCGCGAGATCAACAACTACCACCACGCCCACGACGCCTA CCTGAACGCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATCAAAAAGTAC CCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGACTACAAGG TGTACGACGTGCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGGA AATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCCAAGTACTTCTTCTACAGCAAC ATCATGAACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCAACG GCGAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAAACGGCGA AACCGGGGAGATCGTGTGGGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCC ACCGTGCGGAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAAGTGAATATCG TGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCAGCAAAGA GTCTATCCTGCCCAAGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCC AGAAAGAAGGACTGGGACCCTAAGAAGTACGGCGGCTTCG ACAGCCCCACCGTGGCCTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGCCAA AGTGGAAAAGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAA GAGCTGCTGGGGATCACCATCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCG AGAAGAATCCCATCGACTTTCTGGAAGCCAAGGGCTACAA AGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCTAAGTAC TCCCTGTTCGAGCTGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGG CCTCTGCCGGCGAACTGCAGAAGGGAAACGAACTGGCCCT GCCCTCCAAATATGTGAACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGCCAC TATGAGAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAGA AACAGCTGTTTGTGGAACAGCACAAGCACTACCTGGACGA GATCATCGAGCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAGAGAGTGATC CTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGCCTACA ACAAGCACCGGGATAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAA TATCATCCACCTGTTTACCCTGACCAATCTGGGAGCCCCT GCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACCATCGACCGGAAGA GGTACACCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGAT CCACCAGAGCATCACCGGCCTGTACGAGACACGGATCGAC CTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCGACAAAAGGCCGGCGGCCACGA AAAAGGCCGGCCAGGCAAAAAAGAAAAAG (SEQ ID NO: 124) sgRNA sequences: guide sequence underlined +83 GAGUCCGAGCAGAAGAAGAAGCCCCAGAGCUAGAAAUAGC AAGUUGGGGUAAGGCUAGUCCGUUAUCAACUUGAAAAAGU GGCACCGAGUCGGUGCUUUU (SEQ ID NO: 125) +47 GAGUCCGAGCAGAAGAAGAAGUUUUAGAGCUAGAAAUAGC AAGUUAAAAUAAGGCUAGUCCGUUUU (SEQ ID NO: 126) +67 GAGUCCGAGCAGAAGAAGAAGUUUUAGAGCUAGAAAUAGC AAGUUAAAAUAAGGCUAGUCCGUUAUCAACUUGAAAAAGU GUUUU (SEQ ID NO: 127) mutate proximal crRNA:tracrRNA duplex GAGUCCGAGCAGAAGAAGAAGCCCCAGAGCUAGAAAUAGC AAGUUGGGGUAAGGCUAGUCCGUUAUCAACUUGAAAAAGU GGCACCGAGUCGGUGCUUUU (SEQ ID NO: 128) truncate distal crRNA: tracrRNA duplex GAGUCCGAGCAGAAGAAGAAGUUUUAGAGACAAGUUAAAA UAAGGCUAGUCCGUUAUCAACUUGAAAAAGUGGCACCGAG UCGGUGCUUUU (SEQ ID NO: 129) remove crRNA: tracrRNA duplex bulge GAGUCCGAGCAGAAGAAGAAGUUUUAGAGCUAGAAAUAGC UUUAAAAUAAGGCUAGUCCGUUAUCAACUUGAAAAAGUGG CACCGAGUCGGUGCUUUU (SEQ ID NO: 130) abolish stemloop 1 GAGUCCGAGCAGAAGAAGAAGUUUUAGAGCUAGAAAUAGC AAGUUAAAAUAAUUCUAGUAAGUUAUCAACUUGAAAAAGU GGCACCGAGUCGGUGCUUUU (SEQ ID NO: 131) mutate stemloop 1 GAGUCCGAGCAGAAGAAGAAGUUUUAGAGCUAGAAAUAGC AAGUUAAAAUAAGCCAUGUGCGUUAUCAACUUGAAAAAGU GGCACCGAGUCGGUGCUUUU (SEQ ID NO: 132) truncate linker GAGUCCGAGCAGAAGAAGAAGUUUUAGAGCUAGAAAUAGC AAGUUAAAAUAAGGCUAGUCCGUAACUUGAAAAAGUGGCA CCGAGUCGGUGCUUUU (SEQ ID NO: 133) replace stemloop 2 GAGUCCGAGCAGAAGAAGAAGUUUUAGAGCUAGAAAUAGC AAGUUAAAAUAAGGCUAGUCCGUUAUCACGCCGAAAGGCG GGCACCGAGUCGGUGCUUUU (SEQ ID NO: 134) lengthen stemloop 2 GAGUCCGAGCAGAAGAAGAAGUUUUAGAGCUAGAAAUAGC AAGUUAAAAUAAGGCUAGUCCGUUAUCAACUUGAGAAAUC AAGUGGCACCGAGUCGGUGCUUUU (SEQ ID NO: 135) mutate stemloop 3 GAGUCCGAGCAGAAGAAGAAGUUUUAGAGCUAGAAAUAGC AAGUUAAAAUAAGGCUAGUCCGUUAUCAACUUGAAAAAGU GGCCCCGCGGGGGGCUUUU (SEQ ID NO: 136) lengthen stemloop 3 GAGUCCGAGCAGAAGAAGAAGUUUUAGAGCUAGAAAUAGC AAGUUAAAAUAAGGCUAGUCCGUUAUCAACUUGAAAAAGU GGCACCGAAAGUUUCGGUGCUUUU ((SEQ ID NO: 137) reconstructed sgRNA GAGUCCGAGCAGAAGAAGAAGCCCCAGAGCAUUAGCAAGU UGGGGUAAGCCAUGUGCGUUAUCAGGGCACCAGCCCGGCA CCGAGUCGGUGCUUUU (SEQ ID NO: 138) G43A GAGUCCGAGCAGAAGAAGAAGUUUUAGAGCUAGAAAUAGC AACUUAAAAUAAGGCUAGUCCGUUAUCAACUUGAAAAAGU GGCACCGAGUCGGUGCUUUU (SEQ ID NO: 139) U44G GAGUCCGAGCAGAAGAAGAAGUUUUAGAGCUAGAAAUAGC AAGGUAAAAUAAGGCUAGUCCGUUAUCAACUUGAAAAAGU GGCACCGAGUCGGUGCUUUU (SEQ ID NO: 140) U44C GAGUCCGAGCAGAAGAAGAAGUUUUAGAGCUAGAAAUAGC AAGCUAAAAUAAGGCUAGUCCGUUAUCAACUUGAAAAAGU GGCACCGAGUCGGUGCUUUU (SEQ ID NO: 141) Primers SURVEYOR SURVEYOR Cas9 Target PAM primer F PRIMER R Sp GAGTCCGA GGG CCATCCCCT GGAGATTG GCAGAAGAA TCTGTGAAT GAGACACGG GAA GT AGA St3 GCTCCCATC TGGC same same ACATCAACC G GG

Example 13: Generation of Optimized Functional CRISPR-Cas Systems Targeting the Neurog2 Gene by Modifying sgRNA Architecture with the Insertion of MS2 Loops into Loops of the sgRNA

The crystal structure information (described in U.S. provisional applications 61/915,251 filed Dec. 12, 2013, 61/930,214 filed on Jan. 22, 2014, 61/980,012 filed Apr. 15, 2014) provides structural information to modify sgRNA architecture. Applicants determined that there was potentially room for extension of both the tetraloop and loop2 of the sgRNA (without collision with the Cas9 protein). Applicants showed that insertion of MS2 loops at these positions enabled recruitment of MS2 binding proteins to these two locations, and thereby mediated locus specific recruitment of any effector fusions (such as transcriptional activator domains vp64, p65, transcriptional repressor domains SID4X, KRAB, or any epigenetic effector domains). The Examples are interesting. There is a focus on the identification of two 4 nt stretches in the guides that are exposed “outside” of Cas9-guide-target DNA complex (no contact between these 4 nt stem terminations and Cas9 amino acids were identified in the crystal). One 4 nt stretch falls in the tetraloop, the other 4 nt stretch falls in the stem loop 2. Either or both of these 4 nt stretches can be replaced by aptamer sequence. Each or both can either be replaced completely or partially, or that either or both may be retained completely and a noncoding loop can be added after the 4 nts. The aptamers is a polynucleotide and may be DNA or RNA, but RNA is preferred. The aptamer has a corresponding RNA-binding protein that recognises a specific RNA sequence. Recruitment of these effector domains to the tetraloop and loop 2 of the sgRNA potentially led to a more favorable positioning relative to the targeted DNA (compared to C-term fusions of effector domains to the Cas9 proteins or addition of Ms2 loops after loop 3 of the sgRNA).

Neuro 2a cells (Sigma-Aldrich) were grown in media containing a 1:1 ratio of OptiMEM (Life Technologies) to high-glucose DMEM with GlutaMax and sodium pyruvate (Life Technologies) supplemented with 5% HyClone heat-inactivated FBS (Thermo Scientific), 1% penicillin/streptomycin (Life Technologies), and passaged at 1:5 every 2 days. 120,000 cells were plated in each well of a 24-well plate 18-20 h before transfection. Cells were transfected with Lipofectamine transfection reagent (Life Technologies) according to the manufacturer's instructions. Plasmid DNA was used for transfection of MS2-VP64 and Cas9 constructs, while PCR product was transfected for the guide RNA expression cassette.

RNA was extracted using the RNeasy kit (Qiagen) according to manufacturer's instructions and 1 mg of RNA per sample was reverse-transcribed using qScript (Quanta Biosystems). Relative mRNA levels were measured by reverse transcription and quantitative PCR (qRT-PCR) using TaqMan probes specific for the targeted gene as well as GAPDH as an endogenous control (Life Technologies). ddCt analysis was used to obtain fold-changes relative to negative controls transfected with GFP only.

Results indicated that both insertions in the tetraloop and loop 2 are effective and that the most efficient combination uses an insertion of MS2 loops in both in the tetraloop and in loop 2 of the sgRNA in combination with a dCas9-vp64 and MS2-vp64 construct. This new activator design (illustrated in FIG. 44 and shown as red bar for the TL+L2: Ms2 guide in FIG. 45 ) was found to mediate much higher target gene upregulation compared to the previous design (illustrated in FIG. 43 and shown as the green bar for the regular guide in FIG. 45 ).

MS2 Pilot Sequences are indicated below:

Neurog2 target sequence (SEQ ID NO: 146) GATACGATGAAAAGAATAAGC Tetraloop MS2 stem loop insertion sgRNA scaffold (SEQ ID NO: 147) NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNgttttagagctaggccAACATGAGG ATCACCCATGTCTGCAGggcctagcaagttaaaataaggctagtc cgttatcaCGCCGAAAGGCGggcaccgAGTcggtgcTTTTT Loop 2 MS2 stem loop insertion sgRNA scaffold (SEQ ID NO: 148) NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNgttttagagctaGAAAtagcaagtt aaaataaggctagtccgttatcaacttggccAACATGAGGATCAC CCATGTCTGCAGggccaagtggcaccgAGTcggtgcTTTTT Tetraloop and Loop 2 MS2 stem loop insertion sgRNA scaffold (SEQ ID NO: 149) NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNgttttagagctaggccAACATGAGG ATCACCCATGTCTGCAGggcctagcaagttaaaataaggctagtc cgttatcaacttggccAACATGAGGATCACCCATGTCTGCAGggc caagtggcaccgAGTcggtgcTTTTT  Standard guide scaffold (SEQ ID NO: 150) NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNgttttagagctaGAAAtagcaagtt aaaataaggctagtccgttatcaacttGAAAaagtggcaccgAGT cggtgcTTTTT  MS2-vp64 sequence (SEQ ID NO: 151) ATGGCTTCAAACTTTACTCAGTTCGTGCTCGTGGACAATGGTGGG ACAGGGGATGTGACAGTGGCTCCTTCTAATTTCGCTAATGGGGGG CAGAGTGGATCAGCTCCAACTCACGGAGCCAGGCCTACAAGGTGA CATGCAGCGTCAGGCAGTCTAGTGCCCAGAAgAGAAAGTATACCA TCAAGGTGGAGGTCCCCAAAGTGGCTACCCAGACAGTGGGCGGAG TCGAACTGCCTGTCGCCGCTTGGAGGTCCTACCTGAACATGGAGC TCACTATCCCAATTTTCGCTACCAATTCTGACTGTGAACTCATCG TGAAGGCAATGCAGGGGCTCCTCAAAGACGGTAATCCTATCCCTT CCGCCATCGCCGCTAACTCAGGTATCTACagcgctGGAGGAGGTG GAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGTAGCggacctaaga aaaagaggaaggtggcggccgctggatccGGACGGGCTGACGCAT TGGACGATTTTGATCTGGATATGCTGGGAAGTGACGCCCTCGATG ATTTTGACCTTGACATGCTTGGTTCGGATGCCCTTGATGACTTTG ACCTCGACATGCTCGGCAGTGACGCCCTTGATGATTTCGACCTGG ACATGCTGATTAAC 

Example 14: Further Optimization of Functional CRISPR-Cas Systems by Modifying sgRNA Backbone or Architecture

Applicants tested the efficiency of the tetraloop and loop2 MS2 loop insertions on two additional gene targets (human ASCL1 and human MYOD1) and confirmed the increased effectiveness of sgRNA design as described in Example 13 compared to the standard C-terminal fusion of VP64 to Cas9 (See FIGS. 46 and 47 ). Applicants further tested the hypothesis that a combination of two different activation domains (for e.g. VP64 and β65) could lead to synergy and therefore increased efficiency of target gene upregulation compared to using the same total number of a single type of activation domain. Applicants also tested an alternative guide architecture optimized for CRISPR/Cas9 imaging in: Chen, Baohui, et al. “Dynamic Imaging of Genomic Loci in Living Human Cells by an Optimized CRISPR/Cas System.” Cell 155.7 (2013): 1479-1491 in the context of gene activation.

Methods:

Target Sequences ASCL1 (SEQ ID NO: 152) GCAGCCGCTCGCTGCAGCAG MYOD1 (SEQ ID NO: 153) GGGCCCCTGCGGCCACCCCG

Cell Culture and Transfection and Gene Expression Analysis

Human HEK293FT cells were maintained in high-glucose DMEM with GlutaMax and sodium pyruvate (Life Technologies) supplemented with 10% heat-inactivated characterized HyClone fetal bovine serum (Thermo Scientific) and 1% penicillin/streptomycin (Life Technologies). Cells were passaged daily at a ratio 1 to 2 or 1 to 2.5. For MS2/dCas9 activator experiments, 20,000 HEK293FT cells were plated in 100 μL of culture medium in poly-d-lysine coated 96-well plates (BD biosciences). 24 hours after plating, cells were transfected with a 1:1:1 mass ratio of:

-   -   sgRNA backbone plasmid with gene specific targeting sequence or         pUC19 control plasmid     -   MS2-VP64 plasmid or MS2-p65 plasmid or pUC19 control plasmid     -   dCas9 plasmid or dCas9-VP64 plasmid or dCas9-p65 plasmid or         pUC19 control plasmid

Total plasmid mass per well was 0.3 micrograms. Transfection was performed with 1.5 uL Lipfectamine 2000 (Life Technologies), according to the manufacturer's instructions. Culture medium was changed 5 hours after transfection. 48 hours after transfection, cell lysis and reverse transcription were performed using a Cells-to-Ct kit (Life Technologies). Gene expression levels were quantified by using Taqman qPCR probes (LIfe technologies) and Fast Advanced Master Mix (Life Technologies). ASCL1 and MYOD1 expression levels were calculated relative to GAPDH expression level. Fold gene expression levels were determined by comparison to samples transfected with GFP plasmid only.

The results indicate that the Applicants validated the efficiency of the tetraloop and loop2 MS2 loop insertions on two additional gene targets and confirmed the increased effectiveness of this design compared to the standard C-terminal fusion of VP64 to Cas9. Applicants further confirmed the hypothesis that a combination of two different activation domains could improve target gene activation (via synergy, e.g. by recruiting different epigenetic modulators, general transcription factors and co-activators). Applicants also determined that the alternative guide architecture optimized for CRISPR/Cas9 imaging in: Chen, Baohui, et al. “Dynamic Imaging of Genomic Loci in Living Human Cells by an Optimized CRISPR/Cas System.” Cell 155.7 (2013): 1479-1491 did not exhibit any improvement over the standard architecture.

In conclusion, these experiments showed that an improved Cas9 activator architecture consists of a sgRNA with MS2 loop insertions in the tetraloop and loop 2 in combination with either MS2-VP64 and dCas9-P65 or MS2-P65 and dCas9-VP64.

MS2 sgRNA Scaffold Sequence Information

In all sequences below, NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNN represents the locus-specific targeting sequence of each sgRNA.

pSAMca006 standard sgRNA backbone (SEQ ID NO: 154) NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNgttttagagctaGAAAt agcaagttaaaataaggctagtccgttatcaacttg aaaaagtggcaccgagtcggtgcTTTTTTT +83 nucleotide chimeric backbone used in Zhang Lab CRISPR/Cas9 publications pSAMca002 Tetraloop stem extension + AU flip sgRNA backbone (SEQ ID NO: 155) NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNgtttaagagctatgctg GAAAcagcatagcaagtttaaataaggctagtccgtt atcaacttgaaaaagtggcaccgagtcggtgcTTTTT TT

Backbone Optimized for CRISPR/Cas9 Imaging in:

Chen, Baohui, et al. “Dynamic Imaging of Genomic Loci in Living Human Cells by an Optimized CRISPR/Cas System.” Cell 155.7 (2013): 1479-1491.

T in location +5 (5th nucleotide after target sequence) exchanged with A in location +36. Authors suggest this change should increase sgRNA concentration by removing putative U6 termination site at location +2 to +5.

TGCTG is added after location +12 of standard backbone and CAGCA is added after location +21 of standard backbone. These insertions pair with one another to created an extended stem at the base of the tetraloop. Authors suggest that this stem extension may help stabilize the sgRNA.

pSAMca009 MS2-Binding Loo on Tetraloop and Stemloop 2 s RNA Backbone

(SEQ ID NO: 156) NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNgttttagagctaggccA ACATGAGGATCACCCATGTCTGCAGggcctagcaagt taaaataaggctagtccgttatcaacttggccAACAT GAGGATCACCCATGTCTGCAGggccaagtggcaccga gtcggtgcTTTTTTT

MS2-binding loop ggccAACATGAGGATCACCCATGTCTGCAGggcc (SEQ ID NO: 8) replaces nucleotides +13 to +16 and nucleotides +53 to +56 of the standard sgRNA backbone. The resulting structure is an sgRNA scaffold in which the tetraloop and stemloop 2 sequences have been replaced by an MS2 binding loop. The tetraloop and stemloop 2 were selected for replacement based on information obtained from the Cas9/RNA/DNA crystal structure. Specifically, the tetraloop and stemloop 2 were found to protrude from the Cas9 protein in such a way which suggested that adding an MS2 binding loop would not interfere with any Cas9 residues. Additionally, the proximity of the tetraloop and stemloop 2 sites to the DNA suggested that localization to these locations would result in a high degree of interaction between the DNA and any recruited protein, such as a transcriptional activator.

pSAMca010 MS2-Binding Loop on Tetraloop and Stemloop 2+Tetraloop Stem Extension+AU Flip sgRNA Backbone

(SEQ ID NO: 157) NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNgtttaagagctatgctgggccAACATGAGG ATCACCCATGTCTGCAGggcccagcatagcaagtttaaataaggctagtc cgttatcaacttggccAACATGAGGATCACCCATGTCTGCAGggccaagt ggcaccgagtcggtgcTTTTTTT

T in location +5 of standard sgRNA backbone exchanged with A in location +36 of standard sgRNA backbone. The stem loop extension and MS2-binding loop sequence tgctgggccAACATGAGGATCACCCATGTCTGCAGggcccagca (SEQ ID NO: 158) replaces nucleotides +13 to +16 of the standard sgRNA backbone. The MS2-binding loop sequence ggccAACATGAGGATCACCCATGTCTGCAGggcc (SEQ ID NO: 8)replaces nucleotides +53 to +56 of the standard sgRNA backbone. The resulting structure combines the hypotheses described for pSAMca002 and pSAMca009.

pSAMca011 MS2-Binding Loop on Tetraloop and Stemloop 2+AU Flip sgRNA Backbone

(SEQ ID NO: 159) NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNgtttaagagctaggccAACATGAGGATCAC CCATGTCTGCAGggcctagcaagtttaaataaggctagtccgttatcaac ttggccAACATGAGGATCACCCATGTCTGCAGggccaagtggcaccgagt cggtgcTTTTTTT

T in location +5 of standard sgRNA backbone exchanged with A in location +36 of standard sgRNA backbone. The MS2-binding loop sequence ggccAACATGAGGATCACCCATGTCTGCAGggcc (SEQ ID NO: 8) replaces nucleotides +13 to +16 and nucleotides +53 to +56 of the standard sgRNA backbone. The resulting structure combines the hypothesis described for pSAMca009 with the AUflip hypothesis of pSAMca002 (removing putative U6 termination). This construct differs from pSAMca010 in that it does not include the additional tgctg tetraloop stem extension from pSAMca002, to determine whether overextending the tetraloop stem would diminish sgRNA functionality in the case of pSAMca010.

pSAMca003 MS2-Binding Loop on Tetraloop+Stemloop 2 GC Tract Switch sgRNA Backbone

(SEQ ID NO: 160) NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNgttttagagctaggccAACATGAGGATCAC CCATGTCTGCAGggcctagcaagttaaaataaggctagtccgttatcaCG CCgaaaGGCGggcaccgagtcggtgcTTTTTTT

The MS2-binding loop sequence ggccAACATGAGGATCACCCATGTCTGCAGggcc (SEQ ID NO: 8) replaces nucleotides +13 to +16 of the standard sgRNA backbone. The sequence CGCC replaces nucleotides +49 to +52 of the standard sgRNA backbone. The sequence GGCG replaces nucleotides +57 to +60 of the standard sgRNA backbone. The tetraloop MS2-binding loop insertion was designed with the same rationale as described for pSAMca009 above. The CGCC and GGCG sequences replace the stem portion of stemloop 2. The increased base-pairing strength of the CGCC-GGCG stem compared to the original ACTT-AAGT stem was hypothesized to provide additional stability to the stemloop 2 structure, thereby increasing sgRNA performance or longevity.

pSAMca013 MS2-Binding Loop on Tetraloop No Stemloop 2 GC Tract Switch sgRNA Backbone

(SEQ ID NO: 161) NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNgttttagagctaggccAACATGAGGATCAC CCATGTCTGCAGggcctagcaagttaaaataaggctagtccgttatcaac ttgaaaaagtggcaccgagtcggtgcTTTTTTT

The MS2-binding loop sequence ggccAACATGAGGATCACCCATGTCTGCAGggcc (SEQ ID NO: 8) replaces nucleotides +13 to +16 of the standard sgRNA backbone. The tetraloop MS2-binding loop insertion was designed with the same rationale as described for pSAMca009 above.

pSAMca025 MS2-binding loop on tetraloop and stemloop 2+2 MS2 binding loops on 3′ tail sgRNA backbone

(SEQ ID NO: 162) NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNgttttagagctaggccAACATGAGGATCAC CCATGTCTGCAGggcctagcaagttaaaataaggctagtccgttatcaac ttggccAACATGAGGATCACCCATGTCTGCAGggccaagtggcaccgagt cggtgcTAACATGAGGATCACCCATGTCTGCAGTGCAGGTCGACTCTAGA AACATGAGGATCACCCATGTTTTTTTT

The sequence TAACATGAGGATCACCCATGTCTGCAGTGCAGGTCGACTCTAGAAACATGAGGATC ACCCATGT (SEQ ID NO: 163) comprising two MS2-binding loops separated by a short linker was inserted between nucleotide+76 and +77 of the standard sgRNA backbone. We hypothesize that adding 2 additional MS2-binding loops to the 3′ tail of the sgRNA will increase the activity of the MS2/CRISPR/dCas9 activator system by providing a greater number of MS2 domain binding sites and facilitating increased recruitment of activation domains.

pSAMca026 MS2-Binding Loop on Tetraloop and Stemloop 1 and Stemloop 2 sgRNA Backbone

(SEQ ID NO: 164) NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNgttttagagctaggccAACATGAGGATCAC CCATGTCTGCAGggcctagcaagttaaaataaggggccAACATGAGGATC ACCCATGTCTGCAGggcctccgttatcaacttggccAACATGAGGATCAC CCATGTCTGCAGggccaagtggcaccgagtcggtgcTTTTTTT

MS2-binding loop ggccAACATGAGGATCACCCATGTCTGCAGggcc (SEQ ID NO: 8) replaces nucleotides +13 to +16 and nucleotides +35 to +38 and nucleotides +53 to +56 of the standard sgRNA backbone. In addition to the tetraloop and stemloop 1 MS2-binding loop replacements described for pSAMca009, this structure replaces the loop of stem loop 1 with an MS2-binding loop. The exposed state of stemloop 1, as observed in the Cas9/RNA/DNA crystal structure, suggests that adding an MS2-binding loop at this location would not disrupt the Cas9/RNA/DNA interaction. Further, an MS2-binding loop inserted at this location would allow for recruitment of MS2-activator protein in a region local to the target DNA.

MS2-Activator Protein Information

MS2-VP64 DNA sequence (SEQ ID NO: 165) ATGGCTTCAAACTTTACTCAGTTCGTGCTCGTGGACAATGGTGGGACAGG GGATGTGACAGTGGCTCCTTCTAATTTCGCTAATGGGGTGGCAGAGTGGA TCAGCTCCAACTCACGGAGCCAGGCCTACAAGGTGACATGCAGCGTCAGG CAGTCTAGTGCCCAGAAgAGAAAGTATACCATCAAGGTGGAGGTCCCCAA AGTGGCTACCCAGACAGTGGGCGGAGTCGAACTGCCTGTCGCCGCTTGGA GGTCCTACCTGAACATGGAGCTCACTATCCCAATTTTCGCTACCAATTCT GACTGTGAACTCATCGTGAAGGCAATGCAGGGGCTCCTCAAAGACGGTAA TCCTATCCCTTCCGCCATCGCCGCTAACTCAGGTATCTACagcgctGGAG GAGGTGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGTAGCggacctaag aaaaagaggaaggtggcggccgctggatccGGACGGGCTGACGCATTGGA CGATTTTGATCTGGATATGCTGGGAAGTGACGCCCTCGATGATTTTGACC TTGACATGCTTGGTTCGGATGCCCTTGATGACTTTGACCTCGACATGCTC GGCAGTGACGCCCTTGATGATTTCGACCTGGACATGCTGATTAAC Amino acid sequence (SEQ ID NO: 166) MASNFTQFVLVDNGGTGDVTVAPSNFANGVAEWISSNSRSQAYKVTCSVR QSSAQKRKYTIKVEVPKVATQTVGGVELPVAAWRSYLNMELTIPIFATNS DCELIVKAMQGLLKDGNPIPSAIAANSGIYSAGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSGPK KKRKVAAAGSGRADALDDFDLDMLGSDALDDFDLDMLGSDALDDFDLDML GSDALDDEDLDMLIN

Description

The MS2-VP64 activator protein consists of the following domains from N-term to C-term: the N55K mutant of the MS2 bacteriophage coat protein (shown to have higher binding affinity than wild type MS2 in Lim, F., M. Spingola, and D. S. Peabody. “Altering the RNA binding specificity of a translational repressor.” Journal of Biological Chemistry 269.12 (1994): 9006-9010.), 3×GGGGS linker (SEQ ID NO: 9), SV40 nuclear localization signal, and VP64 activation domain. Functionally, the MS2 domain binds to its specific RNA aptamer, the 3×GGGGS linker (SEQ ID NO: 9) provides mechanical flexibility between the MS2 and VP64 domains, the SV40 nuclear localization signal facilitates transport of the protein into the nucleus, and the VP64 activation domain promotes transcriptional activation.

MS2-p65 DNA sequence (SEQ ID NO: 167) ATGGCTTCAAACTTTACTCAGTTCGTGCTCGTGGACAATGGTGGGACAGG GGATGTGACAGTGGCTCCTTCTAATTTCGCTAATGGGGTGGCAGAGTGGA TCAGCTCCAACTCACGGAGCCAGGCCTACAAGGTGACATGCAGCGTCAGG CAGTCTAGTGCCCAGAAgAGAAAGTATACCATCAAGGTGGAGGTCCCCAA AGTGGCTACCCAGACAGTGGGCGGAGTCGAACTGCCTGTCGCCGCTTGGA GGTCCTACCTGAACATGGAGCTCACTATCCCAATTTTCGCTACCAATTCT GACTGTGAACTCATCGTGAAGGCAATGCAGGGGCTCCTCAAAGACGGTAA TCCTATCCCTTCCGCCATCGCCGCTAACTCAGGTATCTACagcgctGGAG GAGGTGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGTAGCggacctaag aaaaagaggaaggtggcggccgctggatccCCTTCAGGGCAGATCAGCAA CCAGGCCCTGGCTCTGGCCCCTAGCTCCGCTCCAGTGCTGGCCCAGACTA TGGTGCCCTCTAGTGCTATGGTGCCTCTGGCCCAGCCACCTGCTCCAGCC CCTGTGCTGACCCCAGGACCACCCCAGTCACTGAGCGCTCCAGTGCCCAA GTCTACACAGGCCGGCGAGGGGACTCTGAGTGAAGCTCTGCTGCACCTGC AGTTCGACGCTGATGAGGACCTGGGAGCTCTGCTGGGGAACAGCACCGAT CCCGGAGTGTTCACAGATCTGGCCTCCGTGGACAACTCTGAGTTTCAGCA GCTGCTGAATCAGGGCGTGTCCATGTCTCATAGTACAGCCGAACCAATGC TGATGGAGTACCCCGAAGCCATTACCCGGCTGGTGACCGGCAGCCAGCGG CCCCCCGACCCCGCTCCAACTCCCCTGGGAACCAGCGGCCTGCCTAATGG GCTGTCCGGAGATGAAGACTTCTCAAGCATCGCTGATATGGACTTTAGTG CCCTGCTGTCACAGATTTCCTCTAGTGGGCAG Amino acid sequence (SEQ ID NO: 168) MASNFTQFVLVDNGGTGDVTVAPSNFANGVAEWISSNSRSQAYKVTCSVR QSSAQKRKYTIKVEVPKVATQTVGGVELPVAAWRSYLNMELTIPIFATNS DCELIVKAMQGLLKDGNPIPSAIAANSGIYSAGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSGPK KKRKVAAAGSPSGQISNQALALAPSSAPVLAQTMVPSSAMVPLAQPPAPA PVLTPGPPQSLSAPVPKSTQAGEGTLSEALLHLQFDADEDLGALLGNSTD PGVFTDLASVDNSEFQQLLNQGVSMSHSTAEPMLMEYPEAITRLVTGSQR PPDPAPTPLGTSGLPNGLSGDEDFSSIADMDFSALLSQISSSGQ

Description

The MS2-VP64 activator protein consists of the following domains from N-term to C-term: the N55K mutant of the MS2 bacteriophage coat protein (shown to have higher binding affinity than wild type MS2 in Lim, F., M. Spingola, and D. S. Peabody. “Altering the RNA binding specificity of a translational repressor.” Journal of Biological Chemistry 269.12 (1994): 9006-9010.), 3×GGGGS linker (SEQ ID NO: 9), SV40 nuclear localization signal, and p65 activation domain. Functionally, the MS2 domain binds to its specific RNA aptamer, the 3×GGGGS linker (SEQ ID NO: 9) provides mechanical flexibility between the MS2 and p65 domains, the SV40 nuclear localization signal facilitates transport of the protein into the nucleus, and the p65 activation domain promotes transcriptional activation.

Example 15: Further Optimization of Functional CRISPR-Cas Systems by Multiplexing to Mediate Distinct Effects at Different Genomic Loci Simultaneously

PP7 is the RNA-binding coat protein of the bacteriophage Pseudomonas. Like MS2, it binds a specific RNA sequence and secondary structure. The PP7 RNA-recognition motif is distinct from that of MS2. Consequently, PP7 and MS2 may be multiplexed to mediate distinct effects at different genomic loci simultaneously. For example, an sgRNA targeting locus A may be modified with MS2 loops, recruiting MS2-VP64 activators, while another sgRNA targeting locus B may be modified with PP7 loops, recruiting PP7-SID4× repressor domains (FIG. 48 ). In the same cell, dCas9 may thus mediate orthogonal, locus-specific modifications. This principle may be extended to incorporate other orthogonal RNA-binding proteins such as Q-beta.

PP7-Effector Protein Information

Applicants construct PP7-effector constructs as previously described in Examples 13 and 14. Sequence information on these contructs are provided below:

PP7-VP64 DNA sequence (SEQ ID NO: 169) ATGTCCAAAACCATCGTTCTTTCGGTCGGCGAGGCTACTCGCACTCTGAC TGAGATCCAGTCCACCGCAGACCGTCAGATCTTCGAAGAGAAGGTCGGGC CTCTGGTGGGTCGGCTGCGCCTCACGGCTTCGCTCCGTCAAAACGGAGCC AAGACCGCGTATCGCGTCAACCTAAAACTGGATCAGGCGGACGTCGTTGA TTCCGGACTTCCGAAAGTGCGCTACACTCAGGTATGGTCGCACGACGTGA CAATCGTTGCGAATAGCACCGAGGCCTCGCGCAAATCGTTGTACGATTTG ACCAAGTCCCTCGTCGCGACCTCGCAGGTCGAAGATCTTGTCGTCAACCT TGTGCCGCTGGGCCGTagcgctGGAGGAGGTGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGAA GCGGAGGAGGAGGTAGCggacctaagaaaaagaggaaggtggcggccgct ggatccGGACGGGCTGACGCATTGGACGATTTTGATCTGGATATGCTGGG AAGTGACGCCCTCGATGATTTTGACCTTGACATGCTTGGTTCGGATGCCC TTGATGACTTTGACCTCGACATGCTCGGCAGTGACGCCCTTGATGATTTC GACCTGGACATGCTGATTAAC Amino acid sequence (SEQ ID NO: 170) MSKTIVLSVGEATRTLTEIQSTADRQIFEEKVGPLVGRLRLTASLRQNGA KTAYRVNLKLDQADVVDSGLPKVRYTQVWSHDVTIVANSTEASRKSLYDL TKSLVATSQVEDLVVNLVPLGRSAGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSGPKKKRKVAAA GSGRADALDDFDLDMLGSDALDDFDLDMLGSDALDDFDLDMLGSDALDDF DLDMLIN

Description

The PP7-VP64 activator protein consists of the following domains from N-term to C-term: the PP7 Pseudomonas bacteriophage coat protein (with amino acids 68-69 mutated to SG and amino acids 70-75 deleted from the wild type protein as described in Wu, Bin, Jeffrey A. Chao, and Robert H. Singer. “Fluorescence fluctuation spectroscopy enables quantitative imaging of single mRNAs in living cells.” Biophysical journal 102.12 (2012): 2936-2944. and Chao, Jeffrey A., et al. “Structural basis for the coevolution of a viral RNA-protein complex.” Nature structural & molecular biology 15.1 (2007): 103-105.), 3×GGGGS linker (SEQ ID NO: 9), SV40 nuclear localization signal, and VP64 activation domain. Functionally, the PP7 domain binds to its specific RNA aptamer, the 3×GGGGS linker (SEQ ID NO: 9) provides mechanical flexibility between the MS2 and VP64 domains, the SV40 nuclear localization signal facilitates transport of the protein into the nucleus, and the VP64 activation domain promotes transcriptional activation.

PP7-SID4X DNA sequence (SEQ ID NO: 171) ATGTCCAAAACCATCGTTCTTTCGGTCGGCGAGGCTACTCGCACTCTGAC TGAGATCCAGTCCACCGCAGACCGTCAGATCTTCGAAGAGAAGGTCGGGC CTCTGGTGGGTCGGCTGCGCCTCACGGCTTCGCTCCGTCAAAACGGAGCC AAGACCGCGTATCGCGTCAACCTAAAACTGGATCAGGCGGACGTCGTTGA TTCCGGACTTCCGAAAGTGCGCTACACTCAGGTATGGTCGCACGACGTGA CAATCGTTGCGAATAGCACCGAGGCCTCGCGCAAATCGTTGTACGATTTG ACCAAGTCCCTCGTCGCGACCTCGCAGGTCGAAGATCTTGTCGTCAACCT TGTGCCGCTGGGCCGTagcgctGGAGGAGGTGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGAA GCGGAGGAGGAGGTAGCggacctaagaaaaagaggaaggtggcggccgct ggatccATGAACATCCAGATGCTGCTGGAGGCCGCTGACTACCTGGAACG GAGAGAGCGCGAAGCCGAGCACGGATATGCTTCAATGCTGCCCGGAAGCG GCATGAATATTCAGATGCTGCTGGAGGCTGCTGATTACCTGGAAAGGCGC GAACGGGAGGCCGAACATGGCTATGCTTCCATGCTGCCTGGGTCTGGAAT GAATATCCAAATGCTGCTGGAGGCAGCCGATTACCTGGAACGGAGAGAAA GAGAAGCCGAGCACGGATACGCCAGCATGCTGCCAGGCAGCGGGATGAAC ATACAAATGCTGCTGGAGGCTGCCGATTACCTGGAGAGGCGCGAGAGAGA AGCTGAACATGGCTATGCCTCTATGCTGCCC Amino acid sequence (SEQ ID NO: 172) MSKTIVLSVGEATRTLTEIQSTADRQIFEEKVGPLVGRLRLTASLRQNGA KTAYRVNLKLDQADVVDSGLPKVRYTQVWSHDVTIVANSTEASRKSLYDL TKSLVATSQVEDLVVNLVPLGRSAGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSGPKKKRKVAAA GSMNIQMLLEAADYLERREREAEHGYASMLPGSGMNIQMLLEAADYLERR EREAEHGYASMLPGSGMNIQMLLEAADYLERREREAEHGYASMLPGSGMN IQMLLEAADYLERREREAEHGYASMLP

Description

The PP7-SID4× repressor protein consists of the following domains from N-term to C-term: the PP7 Pseudomonas bacteriophage coat protein (with amino acids 68-69 mutated to SG and amino acids 70-75 deleted from the wild type protein as described in Wu, Bin, Jeffrey A. Chao, and Robert H. Singer. “Fluorescence fluctuation spectroscopy enables quantitative imaging of single mRNAs in living cells.” Biophysical journal 102.12 (2012): 2936-2944. and Chao, Jeffrey A., et al. “Structural basis for the coevolution of a viral RNA-protein complex.” Nature structural & molecular biology 15.1 (2007): 103-105.), 3×GGGGS linker (SEQ ID NO: 9), SV40 nuclear localization signal, and SID4× repressor domain. Functionally, the PP7 domain binds to its specific RNA aptamer, the 3×GGGGS linker (SEQ ID NO: 9) provides mechanical flexibility between the MS2 and SID4× domains, the SV40 nuclear localization signal facilitates transport of the protein into the nucleus, and the SID4× domain represses transcriptional activity.

PP7-KRAB DNA sequence (SEQ ID NO: 173) ATGTCCAAAACCATCGTTCTTTCGGTCGGCGAGGCTACTCGCACTCTGAC TGAGATCCAGTCCACCGCAGACCGTCAGATCTTCGAAGAGAAGGTCGGGC CTCTGGTGGGTCGGCTGCGCCTCACGGCTTCGCTCCGTCAAAACGGAGCC AAGACCGCGTATCGCGTCAACCTAAAACTGGATCAGGCGGACGTCGTTGA TTCCGGACTTCCGAAAGTGCGCTACACTCAGGTATGGTCGCACGACGTGA CAATCGTTGCGAATAGCACCGAGGCCTCGCGCAAATCGTTGTACGATTTG ACCAAGTCCCTCGTCGCGACCTCGCAGGTCGAAGATCTTGTCGTCAACCT TGTGCCGCTGGGCCGTagcgctGGAGGAGGTGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGAA GCGGAGGAGGAGGTAGCggacctaagaaaaagaggaaggtggcggccgct ggatccgctttgtctcctcagcactctgctgtcactcaaggaagtatcat caagaacaaggagggcatggatgctaagtcactaactgcctggtcccgga cactggtgaccttcaaggatgtatttgtggacttcaccagggaggagtgg aagctgctggacactgctcagcagatcgtgtacagaaatgtgatgctgga gaactataagaacctggtttccttgggttatcagcttactaagccagatg tgatcctccggttggagaagggagaagagccctggctggtggagagagaa attcaccaagagacccatcctgattcagagactgcatttgaaatcaaatc atcagtt Amino acid sequence (SEQ ID NO: 174) MSKTIVLSVGEATRTLTEIQSTADRQIFEEKVGPLVGRLRLTASLRQNGA KTAYRVNLKLDQADVVDSGLPKVRYTQVWSHDVTIVANSTEASRKSLYDL TKSLVATSQVEDLVVNLVPLGRSAGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSGPKKKRKVAAA GSALSPQHSAVTQGSIIKNKEGMDAKSLTAWSRTLVTFKDVFVDFTREEW KLLDTAQQIVYRNVMLENYKNLVSLGYQLTKPDVILRLEKGEEPWLVERE IHQETHPDSETAFEIKSSV

Description

The PP7-KRAB repressor protein consists of the following domains from N-term to C-term: the PP7 Pseudomonas bacteriophage coat protein (with amino acids 68-69 mutated to SG and amino acids 70-75 deleted from the wild type protein as described in Wu, Bin, Jeffrey A. Chao, and Robert H. Singer. “Fluorescence fluctuation spectroscopy enables quantitative imaging of single mRNAs in living cells.” Biophysical journal 102.12 (2012): 2936-2944. and Chao, Jeffrey A., et al. “Structural basis for the coevolution of a viral RNA-protein complex.” Nature structural & molecular biology 15.1 (2007): 103-105.), 3×GGGGS linker (SEQ ID NO: 9), SV40 nuclear localization signal, and KRAB repressor domain. Functionally, the PP7 domain binds to its specific RNA aptamer, the 3×GGGGS linker (SEQ ID NO: 9) provides mechanical flexibility between the MS2 and KRAB domains, the SV40 nuclear localization signal facilitates transport of the protein into the nucleus, and the KRAB domain represses transcriptional activity.

PP7-NUE DNA sequence (SEQ ID NO: 175) ATGTCCAAAACCATCGTTCTTTCGGTCGGCGAGGCTACTCGCACTCTGAC TGAGATCCAGTCCACCGCAGACCGTCAGATCTTCGAAGAGAAGGTCGGGC CTCTGGTGGGTCGGCTGCGCCTCACGGCTTCGCTCCGTCAAAACGGAGCC AAGACCGCGTATCGCGTCAACCTAAAACTGGATCAGGCGGACGTCGTTGA TTCCGGACTTCCGAAAGTGCGCTACACTCAGGTATGGTCGCACGACGTGA CAATCGTTGCGAATAGCACCGAGGCCTCGCGCAAATCGTTGTACGATTTG ACCAAGTCCCTCGTCGCGACCTCGCAGGTCGAAGATCTTGTCGTCAACCT TGTGCCGCTGGGCCGTagcgctGGAGGAGGTGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGAA GCGGAGGAGGAGGTAGCggacctaagaaaaagaggaaggtggcggccgct ggatccACTACCAACTCCACTCAGGACACACTGTATCTCAGCCTCCACGG CGGAATCGACTCCGCCATCCCATACCCCGTGAGGAGAGTCGAGCAGCTGC TCCAGTTCTCTTTTCTGCCCGAACTCCAGTTCCAGAACGCCGCTGTGAAA CAGAGAATCCAGCGCCTGTGCTATAGAGAGGAAAAGCGGCTGGCTGTCAG CTCCCTCGCAAAGTGGCTGGGCCAGCTCCACAAACAGAGGCTGAGAGCAC CAAAGAACCCCCCTGTGGCCATTTGTTGGATCAATAGTTACGTGGGCTAT GGAGTCTTTGCCCGGGAGTCTATTCCCGCTTGGAGTTACATCGGCGAATA TACCGGCATCCTGCGGCGCCGACAGGCTCTGTGGCTCGACGAGAACGATT ACTGCTTCCGCTATCCTGTGCCACGCTACTCATTCCGATATTTTACCATC GACAGCGGGATGCAGGGTAACGTCACAAGGTTCATCAATCACTCCGATAA CCCTAATCTGGAGGCAATCGGGGCCTTCGAAAACGGTATCTTCCATATCA TCATCAGGGCCATCAAGGATATCCTGCCCGGGGAGGAACTCTGTTACCAC TATGGACCTCTGTACTGGAAGCATCGAAAGAAAAGGGAGGAGTTCGTGCC ACAGGAGGAA Amino acid sequence (SEQ ID NO: 176) MSKTIVLSVGEATRTLTEIQSTADRQIFEEKVGPLVGRLRLTASLRQNGA KTAYRVNLKLDQADVVDSGLPKVRYTQVWSHDVTIVANSTEASRKSLYDL TKSLVATSQVEDLVVNLVPLGRSAGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSGPKKKRKVAAA GSTTNSTQDTLYLSLHGGIDSAIPYPVRRVEQLLQFSFLPELQFQNAAVK QRIQRLCYREEKRLAVSSLAKWLGQLHKQRLRAPKNPPVAICWINSYVGY GVFARESIPAWSYIGEYTGILRRRQALWLDENDYCFRYPVPRYSFRYFTI DSGMQGNVTRFINHSDNPNLEAIGAFENGIFHIIIRAIKDILPGEELCYH YGPLYWKHRKKREEFVPQEE

Description

The PP7-NUE histone effector protein consists of the following domains from N-term to C-term: the PP7 Pseudomonas bacteriophage coat protein (with amino acids 68-69 mutated to SG and amino acids 70-75 deleted from the wild type protein as described in Wu, Bin, Jeffrey A. Chao, and Robert H. Singer. “Fluorescence fluctuation spectroscopy enables quantitative imaging of single mRNAs in living cells.” Biophysical journal 102.12 (2012): 2936-2944. and Chao, Jeffrey A., et al. “Structural basis for the coevolution of a viral RNA-protein complex.” Nature structural & molecular biology 15.1 (2007): 103-105.), 3×GGGGS linker (SEQ ID NO: 9), SV40 nuclear localization signal, and the NUE histone methyltransferase domain from Chlamydia trachomatis. Functionally, the PP7 domain binds to its specific RNA aptamer, the 3×GGGGS linker (SEQ ID NO: 9) provides mechanical flexibility between the MS2 and NUE domains, the SV40 nuclear localization signal facilitates transport of the protein into the nucleus, and the NUE domain increases repressive histone methylation.

PP7-NcOR DNA sequence (SEQ ID NO: 177) ATGTCCAAAACCATCGTTCTTTCGGTCGGCGAGGCTACTCGCACTCTGAC TGAGATCCAGTCCACCGCAGACCGTCAGATCTTCGAAGAGAAGGTCGGGC CTCTGGTGGGTCGGCTGCGCCTCACGGCTTCGCTCCGTCAAAACGGAGCC AAGACCGCGTATCGCGTCAACCTAAAACTGGATCAGGCGGACGTCGTTGA TTCCGGACTTCCGAAAGTGCGCTACACTCAGGTATGGTCGCACGACGTGA CAATCGTTGCGAATAGCACCGAGGCCTCGCGCAAATCGTTGTACGATTTG ACCAAGTCCCTCGTCGCGACCTCGCAGGTCGAAGATCTTGTCGTCAACCT TGTGCCGCTGGGCCGTagcgctGGAGGAGGTGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGAA GCGGAGGAGGAGGTAGCggacctaagaaaaagaggaaggtggcggccgct ggatccAACGGGCTGATGGAGGACCCAATGAAAGTCTACAAGGACAGGCA GTTTATGAACGTGTGGACCGACCACGAGAAGGAAATCTTCAAGGATAAGT TCATCCAGCATCCCAAAAATTTCGGCCTGATCGCCAGCTACCTGGAGAGG AAGTCCGTGCCTGACTGCGTCCTGTACTATTACCTCACAAAGAAAAACGA AAATTACAAA Amino acid sequence (SEQ ID NO: 178) MSKTIVLSVGEATRTLTEIQSTADRQIFEEKVGPLVGRLRLTASLRQNGA KTAYRVNLKLDQADVVDSGLPKVRYTQVWSHDVTIVANSTEASRKSLYDL TKSLVATSQVEDLVVNLVPLGRSAGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSGPKKKRKVAAA GSNGLMEDPMKVYKDRQFMNVWTDHEKEIFKDKFIQHPKNFGLIASYLER KSVPDCVLYYYLTKKNENYK

Description

The PP7-NcoR histone effector protein consists of the following domains from N-term to C-term: the PP7 Pseudomonas bacteriophage coat protein (with amino acids 68-69 mutated to SG and amino acids 70-75 deleted from the wild type protein as described in Wu, Bin, Jeffrey A. Chao, and Robert H. Singer. “Fluorescence fluctuation spectroscopy enables quantitative imaging of single mRNAs in living cells.” Biophysical journal 102.12 (2012): 2936-2944. and Chao, Jeffrey A., et al. “Structural basis for the coevolution of a viral RNA-protein complex.” Nature structural & molecular biology 15.1 (2007): 103-105.), 3×GGGGS linker (SEQ ID NO: 9), SV40 nuclear localization signal, and the HDAC recruiter domain of the human NcoR protein (amino acids 420-488 of wild type). Functionally, the PP7 domain binds to its specific RNA aptamer, the 3×GGGGS linker (SEQ ID NO: 9) provides mechanical flexibility between the MS2 and NcoR domains, the SV40 nuclear localization signal facilitates transport of the protein into the nucleus, and the NcoR domain recruits histone deacetylases leading to repressive histone modifications.

Other potential orthogonal RNA-binding proteins: Additional orthogonal RNA-binding protein/aptamer combinations exist within the diversity of bacteriophage coat proteins. These alternative combinations may be used to develop transcriptional modulators or DNA-effectors analogous to those Applicants have described for MS2 and PP7. A list of such coat proteins includes, but is not limited to: Qβ, F2, GA, fr, JP501, M12, R17, BZ13, JP34, JP500, KU1, M11, MX1, TW18, VK, SP, FI, ID2, NL95, TW19, AP205, ϕCb5, ϕCb8r, ϕCb12r, ϕCb23r, 7s, PRR1.

Example 16: MS2 CasLITE

Further embodiments of the invention include modification of sgRNA architecture with MS2 loops as described in Examples 13 and 14 with further application in inducible CRISPR-Cas systems as described in PCT Application PCT/US2013/051418, entitled “INDUCIBLE DNA BINDING PROTEINS AND GENOME PERTURBATION TOOLS AND APPLICATIONS THEREOF” filed on Jul. 21, 2013 and published as PCT Publication WO2014018423A2 on Jan. 30, 2014, the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.

Applicants previously showed that CRY2 and CIB1 proteins may be fused to transcription activation domains and DNA-binding domains, respectively, in order to allow locus-specific light-inducible control of endogenous transcription (Konermann S, Brigham M D, Trevino A E, Hsu P D, Heidenreich M, Cong L, Platt R J, Scott D A, Church G M, Zhang F. “Optical control of endogenous mammalian transcription and epigenetic states.” Nature. 2013 Aug. 22; 500(7463):472-6). Applicants further showed that this system may be extended to dCas9 transcriptional effectors. Applicants generate an analogous dCas9-based light-inducible MS2-effector, characterized by an MS2-CIB1 recruitment component bound to dCas9-sgRNA, and a CRY2-VP64 transcriptional activator domain. Upon activation with blue light, CRY2-VP64 associate with MS2-CIB1, enabling the recruitment of the transcriptional machinery to the target locus.

The novel MS2-CIB1 inducible recruitment complex consists of the following domains from N-term to C-term: the N55K mutant of the MS2 bacteriophage coat protein (shown to have higher binding affinity than wild type MS2 in Lim, F., M. Spingola, and D. S. Peabody. “Altering the RNA binding specificity of a translational repressor.” Journal of Biological Chemistry 269.12 (1994): 9006-9010.), 3×GGGGS linker (SEQ ID NO: 9), SV40 nuclear localization signal, and p65 activation domain. Functionally, the MS2 domain binds to its specific RNA aptamer, the 3×GGGGS linker (SEQ ID NO: 9) provides mechanical flexibility between the MS2 and CIB1 domains, the SV40 nuclear localization signal facilitates transport of the protein into the nucleus, and the CIB1 domain is a heterodimeric binding partner of the light-sensitive Cryptochrome 2 (CRY2).

The alternative sgRNA designs, orthogonal RNA-binding proteins, and MS2 fusion architectures discussed in previous Examples are entirely compatible with the MS2-CIB1 fusion, with CIB1 acting as the “effector” domain. dCas9-CIB1, which are previously described, may also be compatible with MS2-CIB1—i.e., using dCas9-CIB1 and MS2-CIB1 fusions in tandem may provide functional advantages for inducible manipulation of target gene expression. Finally, optimized LITE architectures may be employed as described in Konermann et al 2013.

Sequence information for MS2 CasLITE constructs are provided below:

MS2-CIB1 DNA Sequence (SEQ ID NO: 179) ATGGCTTCAAACTTTACTCAGTTCGTGCTCGTGGACAATGGTGGGACAGG GGATGTGACAGTGGCTCCTTCTAATTTCGCTAATGGGGTGGCAGAGTGGA TCAGCTCCAACTCACGGAGCCAGGCCTACAAGGTGACATGCAGCGTCAGG CAGTCTAGTGCCCAGAAgAGAAAGTATACCATCAAGGTGGAGGTCCCCAA AGTGGCTACCCAGACAGTGGGCGGAGTCGAACTGCCTGTCGCCGCTTGGA GGTCCTACCTGAACATGGAGCTCACTATCCCAATTTTCGCTACCAATTCT GACTGTGAACTCATCGTGAAGGCAATGCAGGGGCTCCTCAAAGACGGTAA TCCTATCCCTTCCGCCATCGCCGCTAACTCAGGTATCTACagcgctGGAG GAGGTGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGTAGCggacctaag aaaaagaggaaggtggcggccgctggatccAACGGCGCGATTGGTGGGGA TTTGCTGCTTAACTTTCCCGACATGTCCGTGTTGGAACGTCAGCGCGCAC ATTTGAAGTATCTTAACCCCACCTTCGACTCCCCGTTGGCCGGGTTCTTT GCGGACTCATCTATGATTACGGGAGGGGAAATGGACAGCTACCTCTCAAC GGCCGGATTGAATCTTCCGATGATGTATGGAGAAACCACTGTAGAAGGCG ACTCGCGACTCTCGATTTCGCCTGAAACGACGCTGGGAACAGGGAACTTC AAGAAACGGAAATTCGACACGGAGACAAAAGATTGCAACGAAAAGAAGAA GAAAATGACCATGAATCGCGATGATCTGGTAGAGGAGGGAGAGGAGGAAA AGTCGAAGATTACTGAACAGAACAATGGGTCTACCAAAAGTATCAAAAAG ATGAAGCACAAAGCTAAGAAAGAAGAGAACAATTTCAGCAATGACAGCAG TAAAGTCACAAAAGAACTGGAGAAAACGGATTACATTCACGTGAGGGCGC GACGAGGGCAGGCTACAGATTCACATTCAATTGCGGAGAGAGTACGGAGA GAGAAAATCTCAGAAAGGATGAAGTTCCTCCAAGACCTTGTGCCAGGTTG TGACAAGATCACAGGCAAAGCAGGAATGCTGGATGAGATCATCAACTACG TCCAATCGTTGCAAAGACAAATTGAGTTTCTCTCGATGAAACTGGCCATC GTGAATCCTAGACCGGATTTCGACATGGATGACATCTTTGCGAAAGAAGT GGCATCCACTCCCATGACGGTTGTGCCCTCACCGGAGATGGTCTTGTCTG GTTACAGCCACGAAATGGTGCATTCGGGTTATTCAAGCGAGATGGTCAAT TCGGGATACCTTCACGTCAATCCCATGCAGCAGGTGAATACTTCCAGTGA TCCACTCTCCTGCTTTAACAACGGCGAGGCCCCTTCGATGTGGGACTCCC ACGTACAGAATCTCTATGGAAATCTCGGAGTC MS2-CIB1 Amino Acid Sequence: (SEQ ID NO: 180) MASNFTQFVLVDNGGTGDVTVAPSNFANGVAEWISSNSRSQAYKVTCSVR QSSAQKRKYTIKVEVPKVATQTVGGVELPVAAWRSYLNMELTIPIFATNS DCELIVKAMQGLLKDGNPIPSAIAANSGIYSAGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSGPK KKRKVAAAGSNGAIGGDLLLNFPDMSVLERQRAHLKYLNPTFDSPLAGFF ADSSMITGGEMDSYLSTAGLNLPMMYGETTVEGDSRLSISPETTLGTGNF KKRKFDTETKDCNEKKKKMTMNRDDLVEEGEEEKSKITEQNNGSTKSIKK MKHKAKKEENNFSNDSSKVTKELEKTDYIHVRARRGQATDSHSIAERVRR EKISERMKFLQDLVPGCDKITGKAGMLDEIINYVQSLQRQIEFLSMKLAI VNPRPDFDMDDIFAKEVASTPMTVVPSPEMVLSGYSHEMVHSGYSSEMVN SGYLHVNPMQQVNTSSDPLSCFNNGEAPSMWDSHVQNLYGNLGV

Example 17: New dCas9 Activator Constructs Informed by Crystal Structure Information

An optimized CRISPR/Cas9 activator system requires improvements not only in the sgRNA backbone, but in the dCas9-activator fusion constructs. The Cas9/RNA/DNA crystal structure has led to the generation of several hypotheses for improving dCas9-activator function. The crystal structure showed that the C-terminus of dCas9, where the activation domain of the standard dCas9-activator is fused, is poorly localized to the target DNA. Most, but not all, of these hypotheses seek to improve dCas9-activator function by finding preferable locations for the activation domain within the dCas9 protein, rather than at the C-terminus.

In brief:

-   -   Replace dCas9 Rec2 domain with transcriptional effector domain,     -   Replace dCas9 HNH domain with transcriptional effector domain,     -   Insert transcriptional effector domain at sites of flexible         linkers within dCas9: amino acid 553, 575, or 1153     -   Create catalytically inactive dCas9 by combination of D10A and         N863A mutations, rather than D10A and H840A mutations.

Replacing the dCas9 Rec2 domain with transcriptional effector domain: The Cas9/RNA/DNA crystal structure experiments showed that a Cas9 mutant from which the Rec2 domain had been deleted maintained a significant level of nuclease activity. This finding suggests that the Rec2 domain is not essential for the formation of the Cas9/RNA/DNA complex. We hypothesize that replacing the Rec2 domain in dCas9 with a transcriptional effector domain would not inhibit formation of the dCas9/RNA/DNA complex and could facilitate a more efficient interaction between the transcriptional effector domain and the target DNA. Several constructs have been synthesized to investigate this theory.

In each case amino acids 175-306 of dCas9 were replaced with one of the following inserts, with subdomains listed from N- to C-terminus:

-   -   VP64 activation domain     -   3×GGGGS linker (SEQ ID NO: 9), VP64 activation domain, 3×GGGGS         linker (SEQ ID NO: 9)     -   p65 activation domain     -   3×GGGGS linker (SEQ ID NO: 9), p65 activation domain, 3×GGGGS         linker (SEQ ID NO: 9)

Corresponding Constructs

pSAMca042 dCas(hel2-->vp64) pSAMca043 dCas(hel2-->vp64, GSlinker) pSAMca044 dCas(hel2-->P65) pSAMca045 dCas(hel2-->P65 GSlinker)

Replacing the HNH domain with a transcriptional effector domain: Based on the crystal structure, the HNH domain is located close to the DNA/RNA hybrid. In addition, it was found that it is a flexible domain that can move as a consequence of conformational changes while Cas9 is binding target DNA. It is flanked by a disordered linker on the N-term and the a39-a40 linker on the C-term, which can undergo a conformational change to an extended a-helix, moving the HNH domain closer to its target DNA bases. The proximity to target DNA and the flexibility identified in the crystal make a replacement of this nuclease domain with a transcriptional effector domain promising. See FIG. 49 for illustration.

Applicants replace AA775-901 (of the HNH domain) with either vp64 or β65 flanked by a (GGGGS)3 (SEQ ID NO: 9) or a (GGGGS)6 (SEQ ID NO: 10) linker on both sides of the inserted transcriptional effector domain.

Corresponding Constructs

pSAMca050 dCas9(HNH-->vp64, 3XGS) pSAMca051 dCas9(HNH-->vp64, 6XGS) pSAMca052 dCas9(HNH-->P65, 3XGS) pSAMca053 dCas9(HNH-->P65, 6XGS)

Insertions of transcriptional domains into 3 loops of dCas9: In addition to replacing an existing domain (e.g. HNH, Rec2) with a transcriptional effector domain, it may be possible to insert a transcriptional effector domain at different positions in the Cas9 protein. The crystal structure helps in identifying promising loops for such an insertion (favorable properties for a place for insertion include low secondary structure complexity (loop versus helix or sheet, unobstructed space for the additional domain, proximity to target DNA and no current interactions with either target DNA or sgRNA (as these may be disrupted by the addition of the transcriptional effector domain)).

Applicants identified three favorable positions: G533, F575 and K1153. The locations of G533 and K1153 in the Cas9 protein is indicated in the corresponding FIG. 49 . Applicants insert either vp64 or P65 flanked by a (GGGGS)1 (SEQ ID NO: 14) or a (GGGGS)3 (SEQ ID NO: 9) linker on both sides of the inserted transcriptional effector domain at these three locations.

Corresponding Constructs

pSAMca054 dCas9(G533-vp64, 1XGS) pSAMca055 dCas9(G533-vp64, 3XGS) pSAMca056 dCas9(G533-P65, 1XGS) pSAMca057 dCas9(G533-P65, 3XGS) pSAMca058 dCas9(F575-vp64, 1XGS) pSAMca059 dCas9(F575-vp64, 3XGS) pSAMca060 dCas9(F575-P65, 1XGS) pSAMca061 dCas9(F575-P65, 3XGS) pSAMca062 dCas9(K1153-vp64, 1XGS) pSAMca063 dCas9(K1153-vp64, 3XGS) pSAMca064 dCas9(K1153-P65, 1XGS) pSAMca065 dCas9(K1153-P65, 3XGS)

dCas activator sequence information is provided below:

Replacing the dCas9 Rec2 domain with transcriptional effector domain pSAMca042 dCas(hel2 → vp64) - DNA (SEQ ID NO: 181) atgGACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGCCATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGC TGGGCCGTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGG CAACACCGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACA GCGGCGAAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACAC CAGACGGAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCA AGGTGGACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGAT AAGAAGCACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCA CGAGAAGTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACA AGGCCGACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCC ACTTCCTGATCGAGGGCGACCTGAACGGACGGGCTGACGCATTGGACGATTTTGATC TGGATATGCTGGGAAGTGACGCCCTCGATGATTTTGACCTTGACATGCTTGGTTCGG ATGCCCTTGATGACTTTGACCTCGACATGCTCGGCAGTGACGCCCTTGATGATTTCG ACCTGGACATGCTGATTAACAGAGTGAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCCCTGAGC GCCTCTATGATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCTGAAAGC TCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAGAGCA AGAACGGCTACGCCGGCTACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTACAAG TTCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGTGAAGCT GAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATCCCCC ACCAGATCCACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATTTTTAC CCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCATCCC CTACTACGTGGGCCCTCTGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACCAGAA AGAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAAGGGCGCT TCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGATGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCAACGA GAAGGTGCTGCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTATAACGAGCT GACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAATGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCG AGCAGAAAAAGGCCATCGTGGACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTG AAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCTTCGACTCCGTGGAAAT CTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCAACGCCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAA AATTATCAAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGACATTCTGGAAG ATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGAGGACAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTG AAAACCTATGCCCACCTGTTCGACGACAAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGAG ATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGCTGATCAACGGCATCCGGGACAAGC AGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGATTTCCTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAAC TTCATGCAGCTGATCCACGACGACAGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAGAAAGC CCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCTGCACGAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCA GCCCCGCCATTAAGAAGGGCATCCTGCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGTG AAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCCGAGAACATCGTGATCGAAATGGCCAGAGAGA ACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAGAAGAACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGA AGAGGGCATCAAAGAGCTGGGCAGCCAGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGTGGAAAAC ACCCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAAGCTGTACCTGTACTACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGGATAT GTACGTGGACCAGGAACTGGACATCAACCGGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACgcTAT CGTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAAGGACGACTCCATCGACAACAAGGTGCTGACCAGAA GCGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAGAGCGACAACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGAA GATGAAGAACTACTGGCGGCAGCTGCTGAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGAGAAAGT TCGACAATCTGACCAAGGCCGAGAGAGGCGGCCTGAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGC TTCATCAAGAGACAGCTGGTGGAAACCCGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGAT CCTGGACTCCCGGATGAACACTAAGTACGACGAGAATGACAAGCTGATCCGGGAAG TGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCAAGCTGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGT TTTACAAAGTGCGCGAGATCAACAACTACCACCACGCCCACGACGCCTACCTGAAC GCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATCAAAAAGTACCCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGT GTACGGCGACTACAAGGTGTACGACGTGCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGG AAATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCCAAGTACTTCTTCTACAGCAACATCATGAACTTTTTCA AGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCAACGGCGAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACA AACGGCGAAACCGGGGAGATCGTGTGGGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGTGCG GAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAAGTGAATATCGTGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAG GCGGCTTCAGCAAAGAGTCTATCCTGCCCAAGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCC AGAAAGAAGGACTGGGACCCTAAGAAGTACGGCGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGTGGC CTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGCCAAAGTGGAAAAGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGA GTGTGAAAGAGCTGCTGGGGATCACCATCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAAT CCCATCGACTTTCTGGAAGCCAAGGGCTACAAAGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCAT CAAGCTGCCTAAGTACTCCCTGTTCGAGCTGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGG CCTCTGCCGGCGAACTGCAGAAGGGAAACGAACTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTG AACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGCCACTATGAGAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAA TGAGCAGAAACAGCTGTTTGTGGAACAGCACAAGCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCG AGCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAGAGAGTGATCCTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAA GTGCTGTCCGCCTACAACAAGCACCGGGATAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAA TATCATCCACCTGTTTACCCTGACCAATCTGGGAGCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTT GACACCACCATCGACCGGAAGAGGTACACCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCAC CCTGATCCACCAGAGCATCACCGGCCTGTACGAGACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCT GGGAGGCGACagcgctGGAGGAGGTGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAG GTAGCggacctaagaaaaagaggaaggtggcggccgct pSAMca042 dCas(hel2 → vp64) - amino acid (SEQ ID NO: 182) MDKKYSIGLAIGTNSVGWAVITDEYKVPSKKFKVLGNTDRHSIKKNLIGALLF DSGETAEATRLKRTARRRYTRRKNRICYLQEIFSNEMAKVDDSFFHRLEESFLVEEDKK HERHPIFGNIVDEVAYHEKYPTIYHLRKKLVDSTDKADLRLIYLALAHMIKFRGHFLIEG DLNGRADALDDFDLDMLGSDALDDFDLDMLGSDALDDFDLDMLGSDALDDFDLDMLI NRVNTEITKAPLSASMIKRYDEHHQDLTLLKALVRQQLPEKYKEIFFDQSKNGYAGYID GGASQEEFYKFIKPILEKMDGTEELLVKLNREDLLRKQRTFDNGSIPHQIHLGELHAILRR QEDFYPFLKDNREKIEKILTFRIPYYVGPLARGNSRFAWMTRKSEETITPWNFEEVVDKG ASAQSFIERMTNFDKNLPNEKVLPKHSLLYEYFTVYNELTKVKYVTEGMRKPAFLSGEQ KKAIVDLLFKTNRKVTVKQLKEDYFKKIECFDSVEISGVEDRFNASLGTYHDLLKIIKDK DFLDNEENEDILEDIVLTLTLFEDREMIEERLKTYAHLFDDKVMKQLKRRRYTGWGRLS RKLINGIRDKQSGKTILDFLKSDGFANRNFMQLIHDDSLTFKEDIQKAQVSGQGDSLHEH IANLAGSPAIKKGILQTVKVVDELVKVMGRHKPENIVIEMARENQTTQKGQKNSRERM KRIEEGIKELGSQILKEHPVENTQLQNEKLYLYYLQNGRDMYVDQELDINRLSDYDVDA IVPQSFLKDDSIDNKVLTRSDKNRGKSDNVPSEEVVKKMKNYWRQLLNAKLITQRKFD NLTKAERGGLSELDKAGFIKRQLVETRQITKHVAQILDSRMNTKYDENDKLIREVKVITL KSKLVSDFRKDFQFYKVREINNYHHAHDAYLNAVVGTALIKKYPKLESEFVYGDYKVY DVRKMIAKSEQEIGKATAKYFFYSNIMNFFKTEITLANGEIRKRPLIETNGETGEIVWDKG RDFATVRKVLSMPQVNIVKKTEVQTGGFSKESILPKRNSDKLIARKKDWDPKKYGGFDS PTVAYSVLVVAKVEKGKSKKLKSVKELLGITIMERSSFEKNPIDFLEAKGYKEVKKDLII KLPKYSLFELENGRKRMLASAGELQKGNELALPSKYVNFLYLASHYEKLKGSPEDNEQ KQLFVEQHKHYLDEIIEQISEFSKRVILADANLDKVLSAYNKHRDKPIREQAENIIHLFTL TNLGAPAAFKYFDTTIDRKRYTSTKEVLDATLIHQSITGLYETRIDLSQLGGDSAGGGGS GGGGSGGGGSGPKKKRKVAAA pSAMca043 dCas(hel2 → vp64, GSlinker) - DNA (SEQ ID NO: 183) atgGACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGCCATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGC TGGGCCGTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGG CAACACCGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACA GCGGCGAAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACAC CAGACGGAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCA AGGTGGACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGAT AAGAAGCACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCA CGAGAAGTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACA AGGCCGACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCC ACTTCCTGATCGAGGGCGACCTGAACGGCGGGGGAGGCTCCGGTGGTGGGGGCAGC GGAGGGGGGGGCAGCGGACGGGCTGACGCATTGGACGATTTTGATCTGGATATGCT GGGAAGTGACGCCCTCGATGATTTTGACCTTGACATGCTTGGTTCGGATGCCCTTGA TGACTTTGACCTCGACATGCTCGGCAGTGACGCCCTTGATGATTTCGACCTGGACAT GCTGATTAACGGCGGGGGAGGCTCCGGTGGTGGGGGCAGCGGAGGGGGGGGCAGC AGAGTGAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCCCTGAGCGCCTCTATGATCAAGAGATA CGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCTGAAAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGC CTGAGAAGTACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAGAGCAAGAACGGCTACGCCGGCTAC ATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTACAAGTTCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGA AAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGTGAAGCTGAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGC GGAAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATCCCCCACCAGATCCACCTGGGAGAG CTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATTTTTACCCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGG GAAAAGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCATCCCCTACTACGTGGGCCCTCTGGCC AGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACCAGAAAGAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCC CCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAAGGGCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAG CGGATGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCAACGAGAAGGTGCTGCCCAAGCACAG CCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTATAACGAGCTGACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGAC CGAGGGAATGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCGAGCAGAAAAAGGCCATCGTG GACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTGAAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTA CTTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCTTCGACTCCGTGGAAATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTT CAACGCCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAAAATTATCAAGGACAAGGACT TCCTGGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGACATTCTGGAAGATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACA CTGTTTGAGGACAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTGAAAACCTATGCCCACCTGTT CGACGACAAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGAGATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGG CTGAGCCGGAAGCTGATCAACGGCATCCGGGACAAGCAGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCT GGATTTCCTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAACTTCATGCAGCTGATCCACGA CGACAGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAGAAAGCCCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCG ATAGCCTGCACGAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCAGCCCCGCCATTAAGAAGGGC ATCCTGCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGTGAAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAA GCCCGAGAACATCGTGATCGAAATGGCCAGAGAGAACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGA CAGAAGAACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGAAGAGGGCATCAAAGAGCTGG GCAGCCAGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGTGGAAAACACCCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAA GCTGTACCTGTACTACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGGATATGTACGTGGACCAGGAACTGG ACATCAACCGGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACgcTATCGTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAA GGACGACTCCATCGACAACAAGGTGCTGACCAGAAGCGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAG AGCGACAACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGAAGATGAAGAACTACTGGCGGCA GCTGCTGAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGAGAAAGTTCGACAATCTGACCAAGGCCG AGAGAGGCGGCCTGAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGCTTCATCAAGAGACAGCTGGTG GAAACCCGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGATCCTGGACTCCCGGATGAACAC TAAGTACGACGAGAATGACAAGCTGATCCGGGAAGTGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGT CCAAGCTGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGTTTTACAAAGTGCGCGAGATCA ACAACTACCACCACGCCCACGACGCCTACCTGAACGCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTG ATCAAAAAGTACCCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGACTACAAGGTGTA CGACGTGCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGGAAATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCC AAGTACTTCTTCTACAGCAACATCATGAACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCC AACGGCGAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAAACGGCGAAACCGGGGAGA TCGTGTGGGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGTGCGGAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCC CAAGTGAATATCGTGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCAGCAAAGAGTC TATCCTGCCCAAGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCCAGAAAGAAGGACTGGGACC CTAAGAAGTACGGCGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGTGGCCTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGG CCAAAGTGGAAAAGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAAGAGCTGCTGGG GATCACCATCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAATCCCATCGACTTTCTGGAAG CCAAGGGCTACAAAGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCTAAGTACTCC CTGTTCGAGCTGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGGCCTCTGCCGGCGAACTGCA GAAGGGAAACGAACTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTGAACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCA GCCACTATGAGAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAGAAACAGCTGTTT GTGGAACAGCACAAGCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCGAGCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTC CAAGAGAGTGATCCTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGCCTACAACA AGCACCGGGATAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAATATCATCCACCTGTTTACC CTGACCAATCTGGGAGCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACCATCGACCGG AAGAGGTACACCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGATCCACCAGAGCAT CACCGGCCTGTACGAGACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCGACagcgctGGA GGAGGTGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGTAGCggacctaagaaaaagaggaa ggtggcggccgct pSAMca043 dCas(hel2 → vp64, GSlinker) - amino acid (SEQ ID NO: 184) MDKKYSIGLAIGTNSVGWAVITDEYKVPSKKFKVLGNTDRHSIKKNLIGALLF DSGETAEATRLKRTARRRYTRRKNRICYLQEIFSNEMAKVDDSFFHRLEESFLVEEDKK HERHPIFGNIVDEVAYHEKYPTIYHLRKKLVDSTDKADLRLIYLALAHMIKFRGHFLIEG DLNGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSGRADALDDFDLDMLGSDALDDFDLDMLGSDALDDFDLD MLGSDALDDFDLDMLINGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSRVNTEITKAPLSASMIKRYDEHHQDL TLLKALVRQQLPEKYKEIFFDQSKNGYAGYIDGGASQEEFYKFIKPILEKMDGTEELLVK LNREDLLRKQRTFDNGSIPHQIHLGELHAILRRQEDFYPFLKDNREKIEKILTFRIPYYVGP LARGNSRFAWMTRKSEETITPWNFEEVVDKGASAQSFIERMTNFDKNLPNEKVLPKHSL LYEYFTVYNELTKVKYVTEGMRKPAFLSGEQKKAIVDLLFKTNRKVTVKQLKEDYFKK IECFDSVEISGVEDRFNASLGTYHDLLKIIKDKDFLDNEENEDILEDIVLTLTLFEDREMIE ERLKTYAHLFDDKVMKQLKRRRYTGWGRLSRKLINGIRDKQSGKTILDFLKSDGFANR NFMQLIHDDSLTFKEDIQKAQVSGQGDSLHEHIANLAGSPAIKKGILQTVKVVDELVKV MGRHKPENIVIEMARENQTTQKGQKNSRERMKRIEEGIKELGSQILKEHPVENTQLQNE KLYLYYLQNGRDMYVDQELDINRLSDYDVDAIVPQSFLKDDSIDNKVLTRSDKNRGKS DNVPSEEVVKKMKNYWRQLLNAKLITQRKFDNLTKAERGGLSELDKAGFIKRQLVETR QITKHVAQILDSRMNTKYDENDKLIREVKVITLKSKLVSDFRKDFQFYKVREINNYHHA HDAYLNAVVGTALIKKYPKLESEFVYGDYKVYDVRKMIAKSEQEIGKATAKYFFYSNI MNFFKTEITLANGEIRKRPLIETNGETGEIVWDKGRDFATVRKVLSMPQVNIVKKTEVQT GGFSKESILPKRNSDKLIARKKDWDPKKYGGFDSPTVAYSVLVVAKVEKGKSKKLKSV KELLGITIMERSSFEKNPIDFLEAKGYKEVKKDLIIKLPKYSLFELENGRKRMLASAGELQ KGNELALPSKYVNFLYLASHYEKLKGSPEDNEQKQLFVEQHKHYLDEIIEQISEFSKRVIL ADANLDKVLSAYNKHRDKPIREQAENIIHLFTLTNLGAPAAFKYFDTTIDRKRYTSTKEV LDATLIHQSITGLYETRIDLSQLGGDSAGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSGPKKKRKVAAA pSAMca044 dCas(hel2 → P65) - DNA (SEQ ID NO: 185) atgGACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGCCATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGC TGGGCCGTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGG CAACACCGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACA GCGGCGAAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACAC CAGACGGAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCA AGGTGGACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGAT AAGAAGCACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCA CGAGAAGTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACA AGGCCGACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCC ACTTCCTGATCGAGGGCGACCTGAACCCTTCAGGGCAGATCAGCAACCAGGCCCTG GCTCTGGCCCCTAGCTCCGCTCCAGTGCTGGCCCAGACTATGGTGCCCTCTAGTGCT ATGGTGCCTCTGGCCCAGCCACCTGCTCCAGCCCCTGTGCTGACCCCAGGACCACCC CAGTCACTGAGCGCTCCAGTGCCCAAGTCTACACAGGCCGGCGAGGGGACTCTGAG TGAAGCTCTGCTGCACCTGCAGTTCGACGCTGATGAGGACCTGGGAGCTCTGCTGGG GAACAGCACCGATCCCGGAGTGTTCACAGATCTGGCCTCCGTGGACAACTCTGAGTT TCAGCAGCTGCTGAATCAGGGCGTGTCCATGTCTCATAGTACAGCCGAACCAATGCT GATGGAGTACCCCGAAGCCATTACCCGGCTGGTGACCGGCAGCCAGCGGCCCCCCG ACCCCGCTCCAACTCCCCTGGGAACCAGCGGCCTGCCTAATGGGCTGTCCGGAGATG AAGACTTCTCAAGCATCGCTGATATGGACTTTAGTGCCCTGCTGTCACAGATTTCCTC TAGTGGGCAGAGAGTGAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCCCTGAGCGCCTCTATGA TCAAGAGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCTGAAAGCTCTCGTGCGG CAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAGAGCAAGAACGGCTA CGCCGGCTACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTACAAGTTCATCAAGC CCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGTGAAGCTGAACAGAGAG GACCTGCTGCGGAAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATCCCCCACCAGATCCA CCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATTTTTACCCATTCCTGAA GGACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCATCCCCTACTACGTGG GCCCTCTGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACCAGAAAGAGCGAGGA AACCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAAGGGCGCTTCCGCCCAGA GCTTCATCGAGCGGATGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCAACGAGAAGGTGCTG CCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTATAACGAGCTGACCAAAGT GAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAATGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCGAGCAGAAA AAGGCCATCGTGGACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTGAAGCAGCT GAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCTTCGACTCCGTGGAAATCTCCGGCG TGGAAGATCGGTTCAACGCCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAAAATTATCA AGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGACATTCTGGAAGATATCGTG CTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGAGGACAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTGAAAACCTA TGCCCACCTGTTCGACGACAAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGAGATACACCG GCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGCTGATCAACGGCATCCGGGACAAGCAGTCCGGC AAGACAATCCTGGATTTCCTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAACTTCATGCAG CTGATCCACGACGACAGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAGAAAGCCCAGGTGTC CGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCTGCACGAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCAGCCCCGCCA TTAAGAAGGGCATCCTGCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGTGAAAGTGATG GGCCGGCACAAGCCCGAGAACATCGTGATCGAAATGGCCAGAGAGAACCAGACCA CCCAGAAGGGACAGAAGAACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGAAGAGGGCAT CAAAGAGCTGGGCAGCCAGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGTGGAAAACACCCAGCTGC AGAACGAGAAGCTGTACCTGTACTACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGGATATGTACGTGGAC CAGGAACTGGACATCAACCGGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACgcTATCGTGCCTCAG AGCTTTCTGAAGGACGACTCCATCGACAACAAGGTGCTGACCAGAAGCGACAAGAA CCGGGGCAAGAGCGACAACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGAAGATGAAGAAC TACTGGCGGCAGCTGCTGAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGAGAAAGTTCGACAATCT GACCAAGGCCGAGAGAGGCGGCCTGAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGCTTCATCAAG AGACAGCTGGTGGAAACCCGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGATCCTGGACTC CCGGATGAACACTAAGTACGACGAGAATGACAAGCTGATCCGGGAAGTGAAAGTGA TCACCCTGAAGTCCAAGCTGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGTTTTACAAAG TGCGCGAGATCAACAACTACCACCACGCCCACGACGCCTACCTGAACGCCGTCGTG GGAACCGCCCTGATCAAAAAGTACCCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGA CTACAAGGTGTACGACGTGCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGGAAATCGGCA AGGCTACCGCCAAGTACTTCTTCTACAGCAACATCATGAACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGA TTACCCTGGCCAACGGCGAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAAACGGCGAA ACCGGGGAGATCGTGTGGGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGTGCGGAAAGTGCT GAGCATGCCCCAAGTGAATATCGTGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCA GCAAAGAGTCTATCCTGCCCAAGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCCAGAAAGAAG GACTGGGACCCTAAGAAGTACGGCGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGTGGCCTATTCTGTG CTGGTGGTGGCCAAAGTGGAAAAGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAAG AGCTGCTGGGGATCACCATCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAATCCCATCGAC TTTCTGGAAGCCAAGGGCTACAAAGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCC TAAGTACTCCCTGTTCGAGCTGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGGCCTCTGCCG GCGAACTGCAGAAGGGAAACGAACTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTGAACTTCCTG TACCTGGCCAGCCACTATGAGAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAGAA ACAGCTGTTTGTGGAACAGCACAAGCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCGAGCAGATCA GCGAGTTCTCCAAGAGAGTGATCCTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCG CCTACAACAAGCACCGGGATAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAATATCATCCAC CTGTTTACCCTGACCAATCTGGGAGCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACC ATCGACCGGAAGAGGTACACCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGATCCA CCAGAGCATCACCGGCCTGTACGAGACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCG ACagcgctGGAGGAGGTGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGTAGCggacct aagaaaaagaggaaggtggcggccgct pSAMca044 dCas(hel2 → P65) - amino acid (SEQ ID NO: 186) MDKKYSIGLAIGTNSVGWAVITDEYKVPSKKFKVLGNTDRHSIKKNLIGALLF DSGETAEATRLKRTARRRYTRRKNRICYLQEIFSNEMAKVDDSFFHRLEESFLVEEDKK HERHPIFGNIVDEVAYHEKYPTIYHLRKKLVDSTDKADLRLIYLALAHMIKFRGHFLIEG DLNPSGQISNQALALAPSSAPVLAQTMVPSSAMVPLAQPPAPAPVLTPGPPQSLSAPVPK STQAGEGTLSEALLHLQFDADEDLGALLGNSTDPGVFTDLASVDNSEFQQLLNQGVSMS HSTAEPMLMEYPEAITRLVTGSQRPPDPAPTPLGTSGLPNGLSGDEDFSSIADMDFSALLS QISSSGQRVNTEITKAPLSASMIKRYDEHHQDLTLLKALVRQQLPEKYKEIFFDQSKNGY AGYIDGGASQEEFYKFIKPILEKMDGTEELLVKLNREDLLRKQRTFDNGSIPHQIHLGEL HAILRRQEDFYPFLKDNREKIEKILTFRIPYYVGPLARGNSRFAWMTRKSEETITPWNFEE VVDKGASAQSFIERMTNFDKNLPNEKVLPKHSLLYEYFTVYNELTKVKYVTEGMRKPA FLSGEQKKAIVDLLFKTNRKVTVKQLKEDYFKKIECFDSVEISGVEDRFNASLGTYHDLL KIIKDKDFLDNEENEDILEDIVLTLTLFEDREMIEERLKTYAHLFDDKVMKQLKRRRYTG WGRLSRKLINGIRDKQSGKTILDFLKSDGFANRNFMQLIHDDSLTFKEDIQKAQVSGQG DSLHEHIANLAGSPAIKKGILQTVKVVDELVKVMGRHKPENIVIEMARENQTTQKGQKN SRERMKRIEEGIKELGSQILKEHPVENTQLQNEKLYLYYLQNGRDMYVDQELDINRLSD YDVDAIVPQSFLKDDSIDNKVLTRSDKNRGKSDNVPSEEVVKKMKNYWRQLLNAKLIT QRKFDNLTKAERGGLSELDKAGFIKRQLVETRQITKHVAQILDSRMNTKYDENDKLIRE VKVITLKSKLVSDFRKDFQFYKVREINNYHHAHDAYLNAVVGTALIKKYPKLESEFVYG DYKVYDVRKMIAKSEQEIGKATAKYFFYSNIMNFFKTEITLANGEIRKRPLIETNGETGEI VWDKGRDFATVRKVLSMPQVNIVKKTEVQTGGFSKESILPKRNSDKLIARKKDWDPKK YGGFDSPTVAYSVLVVAKVEKGKSKKLKSVKELLGITIMERSSFEKNPIDFLEAKGYKE VKKDLIIKLPKYSLFELENGRKRMLASAGELQKGNELALPSKYVNFLYLASHYEKLKGS PEDNEQKQLFVEQHKHYLDEIIEQISEFSKRVILADANLDKVLSAYNKHRDKPIREQAENI IHLFTLTNLGAPAAFKYFDTTIDRKRYTSTKEVLDATLIHQSITGLYETRIDLSQLGGDSA GGGGSGGGGSGGGGSGPKKKRKVAAA pSAMca045 dCas(hel2 → P65 GSlinker) - DNA (SEQ ID NO: 187) atgGACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGCCATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGC TGGGCCGTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGG CAACACCGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACA GCGGCGAAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACAC CAGACGGAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCA AGGTGGACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGAT AAGAAGCACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCA CGAGAAGTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACA AGGCCGACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCC ACTTCCTGATCGAGGGCGACCTGAACGGCGGGGGAGGCTCCGGTGGTGGGGGCAGC GGAGGGGGGGGCAGCCCTTCAGGGCAGATCAGCAACCAGGCCCTGGCTCTGGCCCC TAGCTCCGCTCCAGTGCTGGCCCAGACTATGGTGCCCTCTAGTGCTATGGTGCCTCT GGCCCAGCCACCTGCTCCAGCCCCTGTGCTGACCCCAGGACCACCCCAGTCACTGAG CGCTCCAGTGCCCAAGTCTACACAGGCCGGCGAGGGGACTCTGAGTGAAGCTCTGC TGCACCTGCAGTTCGACGCTGATGAGGACCTGGGAGCTCTGCTGGGGAACAGCACC GATCCCGGAGTGTTCACAGATCTGGCCTCCGTGGACAACTCTGAGTTTCAGCAGCTG CTGAATCAGGGCGTGTCCATGTCTCATAGTACAGCCGAACCAATGCTGATGGAGTAC CCCGAAGCCATTACCCGGCTGGTGACCGGCAGCCAGCGGCCCCCCGACCCCGCTCC AACTCCCCTGGGAACCAGCGGCCTGCCTAATGGGCTGTCCGGAGATGAAGACTTCTC AAGCATCGCTGATATGGACTTTAGTGCCCTGCTGTCACAGATTTCCTCTAGTGGGCA GGGCGGGGGAGGCTCCGGTGGTGGGGGCAGCGGAGGGGGGGGCAGCAGAGTGAAC ACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCCCTGAGCGCCTCTATGATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCA CCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCTGAAAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGT ACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAGAGCAAGAACGGCTACGCCGGCTACATTGACGGC GGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTACAAGTTCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGA CGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGTGAAGCTGAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAAGCAGC GGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATCCCCCACCAGATCCACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCC ATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATTTTTACCCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGAT CGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCATCCCCTACTACGTGGGCCCTCTGGCCAGGGGAAA CAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACCAGAAAGAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACT TCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAAGGGCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGATGACC AACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCAACGAGAAGGTGCTGCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTA CGAGTACTTCACCGTGTATAACGAGCTGACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAA TGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCGAGCAGAAAAAGGCCATCGTGGACCTGCTG TTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTGAAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAA AATCGAGTGCTTCGACTCCGTGGAAATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCAACGCCTC CCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAAAATTATCAAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGACA ATGAGGAAAACGAGGACATTCTGGAAGATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGAG GACAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTGAAAACCTATGCCCACCTGTTCGACGACAA AGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGAGATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGG AAGCTGATCAACGGCATCCGGGACAAGCAGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGATTTCCT GAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAACTTCATGCAGCTGATCCACGACGACAGCC TGACCTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAGAAAGCCCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCTG CACGAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCAGCCCCGCCATTAAGAAGGGCATCCTGCA GACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGTGAAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCCGAG AACATCGTGATCGAAATGGCCAGAGAGAACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAGAAGA ACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGAAGAGGGCATCAAAGAGCTGGGCAGCCA GATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGTGGAAAACACCCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAAGCTGTACC TGTACTACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGGATATGTACGTGGACCAGGAACTGGACATCAAC CGGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACgcTATCGTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAAGGACGACT CCATCGACAACAAGGTGCTGACCAGAAGCGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAGAGCGACAA CGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGAAGATGAAGAACTACTGGCGGCAGCTGCTGA ACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGAGAAAGTTCGACAATCTGACCAAGGCCGAGAGAGGC GGCCTGAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGCTTCATCAAGAGACAGCTGGTGGAAACCCG GCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGATCCTGGACTCCCGGATGAACACTAAGTACG ACGAGAATGACAAGCTGATCCGGGAAGTGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCAAGCTG GTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGTTTTACAAAGTGCGCGAGATCAACAACTAC CACCACGCCCACGACGCCTACCTGAACGCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATCAAAAA GTACCCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGACTACAAGGTGTACGACGTGC GGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGGAAATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCCAAGTACTTC TTCTACAGCAACATCATGAACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCAACGGCGAG ATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAAACGGCGAAACCGGGGAGATCGTGTGGGA TAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGTGCGGAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAAGTGAATA TCGTGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCAGCAAAGAGTCTATCCTGCCC AAGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCCAGAAAGAAGGACTGGGACCCTAAGAAGT ACGGCGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGTGGCCTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGCCAAAGTGG AAAAGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAAGAGCTGCTGGGGATCACCATC ATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAATCCCATCGACTTTCTGGAAGCCAAGGGCTA CAAAGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCTAAGTACTCCCTGTTCGAGC TGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGGCCTCTGCCGGCGAACTGCAGAAGGGAAA CGAACTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTGAACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGCCACTATGA GAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAGAAACAGCTGTTTGTGGAACAGC ACAAGCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCGAGCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAGAGAGTG ATCCTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGCCTACAACAAGCACCGGGA TAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAATATCATCCACCTGTTTACCCTGACCAATCT GGGAGCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACCATCGACCGGAAGAGGTACA CCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGATCCACCAGAGCATCACCGGCCTG TACGAGACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCGACagcgctGGAGGAGGTGGAA GCGGAGGAGGAGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGTAGCggacctaagaaaaagaggaaggtggcggccgct pSAMca045 dCas(hel2 → P65 GSlinker) - amino acid (SEQ ID NO: 188) MDKKYSIGLAIGTNSVGWAVITDEYKVPSKKFKVLGNTDRHSIKKNLIGALLF DSGETAEATRLKRTARRRYTRRKNRICYLQEIFSNEMAKVDDSFFHRLEESFLVEEDKK HERHPIFGNIVDEVAYHEKYPTIYHLRKKLVDSTDKADLRLIYLALAHMIKFRGHFLIEG DLNGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSPSGQISNQALALAPSSAPVLAQTMVPSSAMVPLAQPPAPAP VLTPGPPQSLSAPVPKSTQAGEGTLSEALLHLQFDADEDLGALLGNSTDPGVFTDLASV DNSEFQQLLNQGVSMSHSTAEPMLMEYPEAITRLVTGSQRPPDPAPTPLGTSGLPNGLSG DEDFSSIADMDFSALLSQISSSGQGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSRVNTEITKAPLSASMIKRYDE HHQDLTLLKALVRQQLPEKYKEIFFDQSKNGYAGYIDGGASQEEFYKFIKPILEKMDGTE ELLVKLNREDLLRKQRTFDNGSIPHQIHLGELHAILRRQEDFYPFLKDNREKIEKILTFRIP YYVGPLARGNSRFAWMTRKSEETITPWNFEEVVDKGASAQSFIERMTNFDKNLPNEKV LPKHSLLYEYFTVYNELTKVKYVTEGMRKPAFLSGEQKKAIVDLLFKTNRKVTVKQLK EDYFKKIECFDSVEISGVEDRFNASLGTYHDLLKIIKDKDFLDNEENEDILEDIVLTLTLFE DREMIEERLKTYAHLFDDKVMKQLKRRRYTGWGRLSRKLINGIRDKQSGKTILDFLKSD GFANRNFMQLIHDDSLTFKEDIQKAQVSGQGDSLHEHIANLAGSPAIKKGILQTVKVVD ELVKVMGRHKPENIVIEMARENQTTQKGQKNSRERMKRIEEGIKELGSQILKEHPVENT QLQNEKLYLYYLQNGRDMYVDQELDINRLSDYDVDAIVPQSFLKDDSIDNKVLTRSDK NRGKSDNVPSEEVVKKMKNYWRQLLNAKLITQRKFDNLTKAERGGLSELDKAGFIKRQ LVETRQITKHVAQILDSRMNTKYDENDKLIREVKVITLKSKLVSDFRKDFQFYKVREINN YHHAHDAYLNAVVGTALIKKYPKLESEFVYGDYKVYDVRKMIAKSEQEIGKATAKYFF YSNIMNFFKTEITLANGEIRKRPLIETNGETGEIVWDKGRDFATVRKVLSMPQVNIVKKT EVQTGGFSKESILPKRNSDKLIARKKDWDPKKYGGFDSPTVAYSVLVVAKVEKGKSKK LKSVKELLGITIMERSSFEKNPIDFLEAKGYKEVKKDLIIKLPKYSLFELENGRKRMLASA GELQKGNELALPSKYVNFLYLASHYEKLKGSPEDNEQKQLFVEQHKHYLDEIIEQISEFS KRVILADANLDKVLSAYNKHRDKPIREQAENIIHLFTLTNLGAPAAFKYFDTTIDRKRYT STKEVLDATLIHQSITGLYETRIDLSQLGGDSAGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSGPKKKRKVAAA Replacing the HNH domain with a transcriptional effector domain pSAMca050 dCas9(HNH → vp64, 3XGS) - DNA (SEQ ID NO: 189) atgGACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGCCATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGC TGGGCCGTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGG CAACACCGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACA GCGGCGAAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACAC CAGACGGAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCA AGGTGGACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGAT AAGAAGCACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCA CGAGAAGTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACA AGGCCGACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCC ACTTCCTGATCGAGGGCGACCTGAACCCCGACAACAGCGACGTGGACAAGCTGTTC ATCCAGCTGGTGCAGACCTACAACCAGCTGTTCGAGGAAAACCCCATCAACGCCAG CGGCGTGGACGCCAAGGCCATCCTGTCTGCCAGACTGAGCAAGAGCAGACGGCTGG AAAATCTGATCGCCCAGCTGCCCGGCGAGAAGAAGAATGGCCTGTTCGGCAACCTG ATTGCCCTGAGCCTGGGCCTGACCCCCAACTTCAAGAGCAACTTCGACCTGGCCGAG GATGCCAAACTGCAGCTGAGCAAGGACACCTACGACGACGACCTGGACAACCTGCT GGCCCAGATCGGCGACCAGTACGCCGACCTGTTTCTGGCCGCCAAGAACCTGTCCG ACGCCATCCTGCTGAGCGACATCCTGAGAGTGAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCC CTGAGCGCCTCTATGATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCT GAAAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACC AGAGCAAGAACGGCTACGCCGGCTACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTC TACAAGTTCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGT GAAGCTGAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGC ATCCCCCACCAGATCCACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGA TTTTTACCCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCG CATCCCCTACTACGTGGGCCCTCTGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGA CCAGAAAGAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAA GGGCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGATGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGC CCAACGAGAAGGTGCTGCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTAT AACGAGCTGACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAATGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCT GAGCGGCGAGCAGAAAAAGGCCATCGTGGACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAA GTGACCGTGAAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCTTCGACTC CGTGGAAATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCAACGCCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACG ATCTGCTGAAAATTATCAAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGAC ATTCTGGAAGATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGAGGACAGAGAGATGATCGA GGAACGGCTGAAAACCTATGCCCACCTGTTCGACGACAAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGA AGCGGCGGAGATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGCTGATCAACGGCATC CGGGACAAGCAGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGATTTCCTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGC CAACAGAAACTTCATGCAGCTGATCCACGACGACAGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACA TCCAGAAAGCCCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCTGCACGAGCACATTGCCAAT CTGGCCGGCAGCCCCGCCATTAAGAAGGGCATCCTGCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGA CGAGCTCGTGAAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCCGAGAACATCGTGATCGAAATGG CCAGAGAGAACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAGAAGGGCGGGGGAGGCTCCGGTGG TGGGGGCAGCGGAGGGGGGGGCAGCGGACGGGCTGACGCATTGGACGATTTTGATC TGGATATGCTGGGAAGTGACGCCCTCGATGATTTTGACCTTGACATGCTTGGTTCGG ATGCCCTTGATGACTTTGACCTCGACATGCTCGGCAGTGACGCCCTTGATGATTTCG ACCTGGACATGCTGATTAACGGCGGGGGAGGCTCCGGTGGTGGGGGCAGCGGAGGG GGGGGCAGCACCAAGGCCGAGAGAGGCGGCCTGAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGCT TCATCAAGAGACAGCTGGTGGAAACCCGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGATC CTGGACTCCCGGATGAACACTAAGTACGACGAGAATGACAAGCTGATCCGGGAAGT GAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCAAGCTGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGTT TTACAAAGTGCGCGAGATCAACAACTACCACCACGCCCACGACGCCTACCTGAACG CCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATCAAAAAGTACCCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGTG TACGGCGACTACAAGGTGTACGACGTGCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGGA AATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCCAAGTACTTCTTCTACAGCAACATCATGAACTTTTTCAA GACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCAACGGCGAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAA ACGGCGAAACCGGGGAGATCGTGTGGGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGTGCGG AAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAAGTGAATATCGTGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAGG CGGCTTCAGCAAAGAGTCTATCCTGCCCAAGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCCA GAAAGAAGGACTGGGACCCTAAGAAGTACGGCGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGTGGCC TATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGCCAAAGTGGAAAAGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAG TGTGAAAGAGCTGCTGGGGATCACCATCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAATC CCATCGACTTTCTGGAAGCCAAGGGCTACAAAGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATC AAGCTGCCTAAGTACTCCCTGTTCGAGCTGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGGC CTCTGCCGGCGAACTGCAGAAGGGAAACGAACTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTGA ACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGCCACTATGAGAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAAT GAGCAGAAACAGCTGTTTGTGGAACAGCACAAGCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCGA GCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAGAGAGTGATCCTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAG TGCTGTCCGCCTACAACAAGCACCGGGATAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAAT ATCATCCACCTGTTTACCCTGACCAATCTGGGAGCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTG ACACCACCATCGACCGGAAGAGGTACACCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACC CTGATCCACCAGAGCATCACCGGCCTGTACGAGACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCTG GGAGGCGACagcgctGGAGGAGGTGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGT AGCggacctaagaaaaagaggaaggtggggccgct pSAMca050 dCas9(HNH → vp64, 3XGS) - AA (SEQ ID NO: 190) MDKKYSIGLAIGTNSVGWAVITDEYKVPSKKFKVLGNTDRHSIKKNLIGALLF DSGETAEATRLKRTARRRYTRRKNRICYLQEIFSNEMAKVDDSFFHRLEESFLVEEDKK HERHPIFGNIVDEVAYHEKYPTIYHLRKKLVDSTDKADLRLIYLALAHMIKFRGHFLIEG DLNPDNSDVDKLFIQLVQTYNQLFEENPINASGVDAKAILSARLSKSRRLENLIAQLPGE KKNGLFGNLIALSLGLTPNFKSNFDLAEDAKLQLSKDTYDDDLDNLLAQIGDQYADLFL AAKNLSDAILLSDILRVNTEITKAPLSASMIKRYDEHHQDLTLLKALVRQQLPEKYKEIFF DQSKNGYAGYIDGGASQEEFYKFIKPILEKMDGTEELLVKLNREDLLRKQRTFDNGSIPH QIHLGELHAILRRQEDFYPFLKDNREKIEKILTFRIPYYVGPLARGNSRFAWMTRKSEETI TPWNFEEVVDKGASAQSFIERMTNFDKNLPNEKVLPKHSLLYEYFTVYNELTKVKYVTE GMRKPAFLSGEQKKAIVDLLFKTNRKVTVKQLKEDYFKKIECFDSVEISGVEDRFNASL GTYHDLLKIIKDKDFLDNEENEDILEDIVLTLTLFEDREMIEERLKTYAHLFDDKVMKQL KRRRYTGWGRLSRKLINGIRDKQSGKTILDFLKSDGFANRNFMQLIHDDSLTFKEDIQKA QVSGQGDSLHEHIANLAGSPAIKKGILQTVKVVDELVKVMGRHKPENIVIEMARENQTT QKGQKGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSGRADALDDFDLDMLGSDALDDFDLDMLGSDALDDFD LDMLGSDALDDFDLDMLINGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSTKAERGGLSELDKAGFIKRQLVET RQITKHVAQILDSRMNTKYDENDKLIREVKVITLKSKLVSDFRKDFQFYKVREINNYHH AHDAYLNAVVGTALIKKYPKLESEFVYGDYKVYDVRKMIAKSEQEIGKATAKYFFYSNI MNFFKTEITLANGEIRKRPLIETNGETGEIVWDKGRDFATVRKVLSMPQVNIVKKTEVQT GGFSKESILPKRNSDKLIARKKDWDPKKYGGFDSPTVAYSVLVVAKVEKGKSKKLKSV KELLGITIMERSSFEKNPIDFLEAKGYKEVKKDLIIKLPKYSLFELENGRKRMLASAGELQ KGNELALPSKYVNFLYLASHYEKLKGSPEDNEQKQLFVEQHKHYLDEIIEQISEFSKRVIL ADANLDKVLSAYNKHRDKPIREQAENIIHLFTLTNLGAPAAFKYFDTTIDRKRYTSTKEV LDATLIHQSITGLYETRIDLSQLGGDSAGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSGPKKKRKVAAA pSAMca051 dCas9(HNH → vp64, 6XGS) - DNA (SEQ ID NO: 191) AAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGCCATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGCTGGGC CGTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCAACA CCGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACAGCGGC GAAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACACCAGAC GGAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAGGTG GACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGATAAGAA GCACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACGAGA AGTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAAGGCC GACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCACTTC CTGATCGAGGGCGACCTGAACCCCGACAACAGCGACGTGGACAAGCTGTTCATCCA GCTGGTGCAGACCTACAACCAGCTGTTCGAGGAAAACCCCATCAACGCCAGCGGCG TGGACGCCAAGGCCATCCTGTCTGCCAGACTGAGCAAGAGCAGACGGCTGGAAAAT CTGATCGCCCAGCTGCCCGGCGAGAAGAAGAATGGCCTGTTCGGCAACCTGATTGC CCTGAGCCTGGGCCTGACCCCCAACTTCAAGAGCAACTTCGACCTGGCCGAGGATG CCAAACTGCAGCTGAGCAAGGACACCTACGACGACGACCTGGACAACCTGCTGGCC CAGATCGGCGACCAGTACGCCGACCTGTTTCTGGCCGCCAAGAACCTGTCCGACGCC ATCCTGCTGAGCGACATCCTGAGAGTGAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCCCTGAG CGCCTCTATGATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCTGAAAG CTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAGAGCA AGAACGGCTACGCCGGCTACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTACAAG TTCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGTGAAGCT GAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATCCCCC ACCAGATCCACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATTTTTAC CCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCATCCC CTACTACGTGGGCCCTCTGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACCAGAA AGAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAAGGGCGCT TCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGATGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCAACGA GAAGGTGCTGCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTATAACGAGCT GACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAATGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCG AGCAGAAAAAGGCCATCGTGGACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTG AAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCTTCGACTCCGTGGAAAT CTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCAACGCCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAA AATTATCAAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGACATTCTGGAAG ATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGAGGACAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTG AAAACCTATGCCCACCTGTTCGACGACAAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGAG ATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGCTGATCAACGGCATCCGGGACAAGC AGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGATTTCCTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAAC TTCATGCAGCTGATCCACGACGACAGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAGAAAGC CCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCTGCACGAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCA GCCCCGCCATTAAGAAGGGCATCCTGCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGTG AAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCCGAGAACATCGTGATCGAAATGGCCAGAGAGA ACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAGAAGGGGGGTGGTGGAAGTGGCGGTGGCGGCTC CGGAGGAGGAGGAAGCGGCGGCGGTGGTAGTGGCGGCGGCGGAAGCGGAGGCGGC GGCTCCGGACGGGCTGACGCATTGGACGATTTTGATCTGGATATGCTGGGAAGTGAC GCCCTCGATGATTTTGACCTTGACATGCTTGGTTCGGATGCCCTTGATGACTTTGACC TCGACATGCTCGGCAGTGACGCCCTTGATGATTTCGACCTGGACATGCTGATTAACG GGGGTGGTGGAAGTGGCGGTGGCGGCTCCGGAGGAGGAGGAAGCGGCGGCGGTGG TAGTGGCGGCGGCGGAAGCGGAGGCGGCGGCTCCACCAAGGCCGAGAGAGGCGGC CTGAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGCTTCATCAAGAGACAGCTGGTGGAAACCCGGCA GATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGATCCTGGACTCCCGGATGAACACTAAGTACGACG AGAATGACAAGCTGATCCGGGAAGTGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCAAGCTGGTG TCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGTTTTACAAAGTGCGCGAGATCAACAACTACCAC CACGCCCACGACGCCTACCTGAACGCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATCAAAAAGTA CCCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGACTACAAGGTGTACGACGTGCGGA AGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGGAAATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCCAAGTACTTCTTC TACAGCAACATCATGAACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCAACGGCGAGATC CGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAAACGGCGAAACCGGGGAGATCGTGTGGGATAA GGGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGTGCGGAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAAGTGAATATCG TGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCAGCAAAGAGTCTATCCTGCCCAAG AGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCCAGAAAGAAGGACTGGGACCCTAAGAAGTACG GCGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGTGGCCTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGCCAAAGTGGAAA AGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAAGAGCTGCTGGGGATCACCATCATG GAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAATCCCATCGACTTTCTGGAAGCCAAGGGCTACAA AGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCTAAGTACTCCCTGTTCGAGCTGG AAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGGCCTCTGCCGGCGAACTGCAGAAGGGAAACGA ACTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTGAACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGCCACTATGAGAA GCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAGAAACAGCTGTTTGTGGAACAGCACA AGCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCGAGCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAGAGAGTGATC CTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGCCTACAACAAGCACCGGGATAA GCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAATATCATCCACCTGTTTACCCTGACCAATCTGGG AGCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACCATCGACCGGAAGAGGTACACCA GCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGATCCACCAGAGCATCACCGGCCTGTAC GAGACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCGACagcgctGGAGGAGGTGGAAGCG GAGGAGGAGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGTAGCggacctaagaaaaagaggaaggtggcggccgctgctagcG GCAG pSAMca051 dCas9(HNH → vp64, 6XGS) - AA (SEQ ID NO: 192) KKYSIGLAIGTNSVGWAVITDEYKVPSKKFKVLGNTDRHSIKKNLIGALLFDS GETAEATRLKRTARRRYTRRKNRICYLQEIFSNEMAKVDDSFFHRLEESFLVEEDKKHE RHPIFGNIVDEVAYHEKYPTIYHLRKKLVDSTDKADLRLIYLALAHMIKFRGHFLIEGDL NPDNSDVDKLFIQLVQTYNQLFEENPINASGVDAKAILSARLSKSRRLENLIAQLPGEKK NGLFGNLIALSLGLTPNFKSNFDLAEDAKLQLSKDTYDDDLDNLLAQIGDQYADLFLAA KNLSDAILLSDILRVNTEITKAPLSASMIKRYDEHHQDLTLLKALVRQQLPEKYKEIFFDQ SKNGYAGYIDGGASQEEFYKFIKPILEKMDGTEELLVKLNREDLLRKQRTFDNGSIPHQI HLGELHAILRRQEDFYPFLKDNREKIEKILTFRIPYYVGPLARGNSRFAWMTRKSEETITP WNFEEVVDKGASAQSFIERMTNFDKNLPNEKVLPKHSLLYEYFTVYNELTKVKYVTEG MRKPAFLSGEQKKAIVDLLFKTNRKVTVKQLKEDYFKKIECFDSVEISGVEDRFNASLG TYHDLLKIIKDKDFLDNEENEDILEDIVLTLTLFEDREMIEERLKTYAHLFDDKVMKQLK RRRYTGWGRLSRKLINGIRDKQSGKTILDFLKSDGFANRNFMQLIHDDSLTFKEDIQKAQ VSGQGDSLHEHIANLAGSPAIKKGILQTVKVVDELVKVMGRHKPENIVIEMARENQTTQ KGQKGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSGRADALDDFDLDMLGSDALDDF DLDMLGSDALDDFDLDMLGSDALDDFDLDMLINGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSGGG GSGGGGSTKAERGGLSELDKAGFIKRQLVETRQITKHVAQILDSRMNTKYDENDKLIRE VKVITLKSKLVSDFRKDFQFYKVREINNYHHAHDAYLNAVVGTALIKKYPKLESEFVYG DYKVYDVRKMIAKSEQEIGKATAKYFFYSNIMNFFKTEITLANGEIRKRPLIETNGETGEI VWDKGRDFATVRKVLSMPQVNIVKKTEVQTGGFSKESILPKRNSDKLIARKKDWDPKK YGGFDSPTVAYSVLVVAKVEKGKSKKLKSVKELLGITIMERSSFEKNPIDFLEAKGYKE VKKDLIIKLPKYSLFELENGRKRMLASAGELQKGNELALPSKYVNFLYLASHYEKLKGS PEDNEQKQLFVEQHKHYLDEIIEQISEFSKRVILADANLDKVLSAYNKHRDKPIREQAENI IHLFTLTNLGAPAAFKYFDTTIDRKRYTSTKEVLDATLIHQSITGLYETRIDLSQLGGDSA GGGGSGGGGSGGGGSGPKKKRKVAAAASG pSAMca052 dCas9(HNH → P65, 3XGS) - DNA (SEQ ID NO: 193) GACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGCCATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGCTG GGCCGTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCA ACACCGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACAGC GGCGAAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACACCA GACGGAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAG GTGGACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGATAA GAAGCACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACG AGAAGTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAAG GCCGACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCAC TTCCTGATCGAGGGCGACCTGAACCCCGACAACAGCGACGTGGACAAGCTGTTCAT CCAGCTGGTGCAGACCTACAACCAGCTGTTCGAGGAAAACCCCATCAACGCCAGCG GCGTGGACGCCAAGGCCATCCTGTCTGCCAGACTGAGCAAGAGCAGACGGCTGGAA AATCTGATCGCCCAGCTGCCCGGCGAGAAGAAGAATGGCCTGTTCGGCAACCTGAT TGCCCTGAGCCTGGGCCTGACCCCCAACTTCAAGAGCAACTTCGACCTGGCCGAGG ATGCCAAACTGCAGCTGAGCAAGGACACCTACGACGACGACCTGGACAACCTGCTG GCCCAGATCGGCGACCAGTACGCCGACCTGTTTCTGGCCGCCAAGAACCTGTCCGAC GCCATCCTGCTGAGCGACATCCTGAGAGTGAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCCCT GAGCGCCTCTATGATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCTGA AAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAG AGCAAGAACGGCTACGCCGGCTACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTA CAAGTTCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGTGA AGCTGAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATC CCCCACCAGATCCACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATTT TTACCCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCA TCCCCTACTACGTGGGCCCTCTGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACC AGAAAGAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAAGG GCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGATGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCA ACGAGAAGGTGCTGCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTATAAC GAGCTGACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAATGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAG CGGCGAGCAGAAAAAGGCCATCGTGGACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGA CCGTGAAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCTTCGACTCCGTG GAAATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCAACGCCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTG CTGAAAATTATCAAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGACATTCT GGAAGATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGAGGACAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAAC GGCTGAAAACCTATGCCCACCTGTTCGACGACAAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGG CGGAGATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGCTGATCAACGGCATCCGGGA CAAGCAGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGATTTCCTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACA GAAACTTCATGCAGCTGATCCACGACGACAGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAG AAAGCCCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCTGCACGAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGC CGGCAGCCCCGCCATTAAGAAGGGCATCCTGCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGC TCGTGAAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCCGAGAACATCGTGATCGAAATGGCCAGA GAGAACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAGAAGGGCGGGGGAGGCTCCGGTGGTGGGG GCAGCGGAGGGGGGGGCAGCCCTTCAGGGCAGATCAGCAACCAGGCCCTGGCTCTG GCCCCTAGCTCCGCTCCAGTGCTGGCCCAGACTATGGTGCCCTCTAGTGCTATGGTG CCTCTGGCCCAGCCACCTGCTCCAGCCCCTGTGCTGACCCCAGGACCACCCCAGTCA CTGAGCGCTCCAGTGCCCAAGTCTACACAGGCCGGCGAGGGGACTCTGAGTGAAGC TCTGCTGCACCTGCAGTTCGACGCTGATGAGGACCTGGGAGCTCTGCTGGGGAACAG CACCGATCCCGGAGTGTTCACAGATCTGGCCTCCGTGGACAACTCTGAGTTTCAGCA GCTGCTGAATCAGGGCGTGTCCATGTCTCATAGTACAGCCGAACCAATGCTGATGGA GTACCCCGAAGCCATTACCCGGCTGGTGACCGGCAGCCAGCGGCCCCCCGACCCCG CTCCAACTCCCCTGGGAACCAGCGGCCTGCCTAATGGGCTGTCCGGAGATGAAGAC TTCTCAAGCATCGCTGATATGGACTTTAGTGCCCTGCTGTCACAGATTTCCTCTAGTG GGCAGGGCGGGGGAGGCTCCGGTGGTGGGGGCAGCGGAGGGGGGGGCAGCACCAA GGCCGAGAGAGGCGGCCTGAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGCTTCATCAAGAGACAG CTGGTGGAAACCCGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGATCCTGGACTCCCGGAT GAACACTAAGTACGACGAGAATGACAAGCTGATCCGGGAAGTGAAAGTGATCACCC TGAAGTCCAAGCTGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGTTTTACAAAGTGCGCG AGATCAACAACTACCACCACGCCCACGACGCCTACCTGAACGCCGTCGTGGGAACC GCCCTGATCAAAAAGTACCCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGACTACAA GGTGTACGACGTGCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGGAAATCGGCAAGGCT ACCGCCAAGTACTTCTTCTACAGCAACATCATGAACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGATTACC CTGGCCAACGGCGAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAAACGGCGAAACCGG GGAGATCGTGTGGGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGTGCGGAAAGTGCTGAGCA TGCCCCAAGTGAATATCGTGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCAGCAAA GAGTCTATCCTGCCCAAGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCCAGAAAGAAGGACTG GGACCCTAAGAAGTACGGCGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGTGGCCTATTCTGTGCTGGT GGTGGCCAAAGTGGAAAAGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAAGAGCTG CTGGGGATCACCATCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAATCCCATCGACTTTCT GGAAGCCAAGGGCTACAAAGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCTAAGT ACTCCCTGTTCGAGCTGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGGCCTCTGCCGGCGAA CTGCAGAAGGGAAACGAACTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTGAACTTCCTGTACCTG GCCAGCCACTATGAGAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAGAAACAGCT GTTTGTGGAACAGCACAAGCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCGAGCAGATCAGCGAGT TCTCCAAGAGAGTGATCCTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGCCTACA ACAAGCACCGGGATAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAATATCATCCACCTGTTT ACCCTGACCAATCTGGGAGCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACCATCGAC CGGAAGAGGTACACCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGATCCACCAGAG CATCACCGGCCTGTACGAGACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCGAC pSAMca052 dCas9(HNH → P65, 3XGS) - AA (SEQ ID NO: 194) DKKYSIGLAIGTNSVGWAVITDEYKVPSKKFKVLGNTDRHSIKKNLIGALLFD SGETAEATRLKRTARRRYTRRKNRICYLQEIFSNEMAKVDDSFFHRLEESFLVEEDKKHE RHPIFGNIVDEVAYHEKYPTIYHLRKKLVDSTDKADLRLIYLALAHMIKFRGHFLIEGDL NPDNSDVDKLFIQLVQTYNQLFEENPINASGVDAKAILSARLSKSRRLENLIAQLPGEKK NGLFGNLIALSLGLTPNFKSNFDLAEDAKLQLSKDTYDDDLDNLLAQIGDQYADLFLAA KNLSDAILLSDILRVNTEITKAPLSASMIKRYDEHHQDLTLLKALVRQQLPEKYKEIFFDQ SKNGYAGYIDGGASQEEFYKFIKPILEKMDGTEELLVKLNREDLLRKQRTFDNGSIPHQI HLGELHAILRRQEDFYPFLKDNREKIEKILTFRIPYYVGPLARGNSRFAWMTRKSEETITP WNFEEVVDKGASAQSFIERMTNFDKNLPNEKVLPKHSLLYEYFTVYNELTKVKYVTEG MRKPAFLSGEQKKAIVDLLFKTNRKVTVKQLKEDYFKKIECFDSVEISGVEDRFNASLG TYHDLLKIIKDKDFLDNEENEDILEDIVLTLTLFEDREMIEERLKTYAHLFDDKVMKQLK RRRYTGWGRLSRKLINGIRDKQSGKTILDFLKSDGFANRNFMQLIHDDSLTFKEDIQKAQ VSGQGDSLHEHIANLAGSPAIKKGILQTVKVVDELVKVMGRHKPENIVIEMARENQTTQ KGQKGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSPSGQISNQALALAPSSAPVLAQTMVPSSAMVPLAQPPAP APVLTPGPPQSLSAPVPKSTQAGEGTLSEALLHLQFDADEDLGALLGNSTDPGVFTDLAS VDNSEFQQLLNQGVSMSHSTAEPMLMEYPEAITRLVTGSQRPPDPAPTPLGTSGLPNGLS GDEDFSSIADMDFSALLSQISSSGQGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSTKAERGGLSELDKAGFIKR QLVETRQITKHVAQILDSRMNTKYDENDKLIREVKVITLKSKLVSDFRKDFQFYKVREIN NYHHAHDAYLNAVVGTALIKKYPKLESEFVYGDYKVYDVRKMIAKSEQEIGKATAKYF FYSNIMNFFKTEITLANGEIRKRPLIETNGETGEIVWDKGRDFATVRKVLSMPQVNIVKK TEVQTGGFSKESILPKRNSDKLIARKKDWDPKKYGGFDSPTVAYSVLVVAKVEKGKSK KLKSVKELLGITIMERSSFEKNPIDFLEAKGYKEVKKDLIIKLPKYSLFELENGRKRMLAS AGELQKGNELALPSKYVNFLYLASHYEKLKGSPEDNEQKQLFVEQHKHYLDEIIEQISEF SKRVILADANLDKVLSAYNKHRDKPIREQAENIIHLFTLTNLGAPAAFKYFDTTIDRKRY TSTKEVLDATLIHQSITGLYETRIDLSQLGGD pSAMca053 dCas9(HNH → P65, 6XGS) - DNA (SEQ ID NO: 195) gGACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGCCATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGCT GGGCCGTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGC AACACCGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACAG CGGCGAAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACACC AGACGGAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAA GGTGGACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGATA AGAAGCACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCAC GAGAAGTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAA GGCCGACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCA CTTCCTGATCGAGGGCGACCTGAACCCCGACAACAGCGACGTGGACAAGCTGTTCA TCCAGCTGGTGCAGACCTACAACCAGCTGTTCGAGGAAAACCCCATCAACGCCAGC GGCGTGGACGCCAAGGCCATCCTGTCTGCCAGACTGAGCAAGAGCAGACGGCTGGA AAATCTGATCGCCCAGCTGCCCGGCGAGAAGAAGAATGGCCTGTTCGGCAACCTGA TTGCCCTGAGCCTGGGCCTGACCCCCAACTTCAAGAGCAACTTCGACCTGGCCGAGG ATGCCAAACTGCAGCTGAGCAAGGACACCTACGACGACGACCTGGACAACCTGCTG GCCCAGATCGGCGACCAGTACGCCGACCTGTTTCTGGCCGCCAAGAACCTGTCCGAC GCCATCCTGCTGAGCGACATCCTGAGAGTGAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCCCT GAGCGCCTCTATGATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCTGA AAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAG AGCAAGAACGGCTACGCCGGCTACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTA CAAGTTCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGTGA AGCTGAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATC CCCCACCAGATCCACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATTT TTACCCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCA TCCCCTACTACGTGGGCCCTCTGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACC AGAAAGAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAAGG GCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGATGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCA ACGAGAAGGTGCTGCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTATAAC GAGCTGACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAATGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAG CGGCGAGCAGAAAAAGGCCATCGTGGACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGA CCGTGAAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCTTCGACTCCGTG GAAATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCAACGCCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTG CTGAAAATTATCAAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGACATTCT GGAAGATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGAGGACAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAAC GGCTGAAAACCTATGCCCACCTGTTCGACGACAAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGG CGGAGATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGCTGATCAACGGCATCCGGGA CAAGCAGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGATTTCCTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACA GAAACTTCATGCAGCTGATCCACGACGACAGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAG AAAGCCCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCTGCACGAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGC CGGCAGCCCCGCCATTAAGAAGGGCATCCTGCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGC TCGTGAAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCCGAGAACATCGTGATCGAAATGGCCAGA GAGAACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAGAAGGGGGGTGGTGGAAGTGGCGGTGGCG GCTCCGGAGGAGGAGGAAGCGGCGGCGGTGGTAGTGGCGGCGGCGGAAGCGGAGG CGGCGGCTCCCCTTCAGGGCAGATCAGCAACCAGGCCCTGGCTCTGGCCCCTAGCTC CGCTCCAGTGCTGGCCCAGACTATGGTGCCCTCTAGTGCTATGGTGCCTCTGGCCCA GCCACCTGCTCCAGCCCCTGTGCTGACCCCAGGACCACCCCAGTCACTGAGCGCTCC AGTGCCCAAGTCTACACAGGCCGGCGAGGGGACTCTGAGTGAAGCTCTGCTGCACC TGCAGTTCGACGCTGATGAGGACCTGGGAGCTCTGCTGGGGAACAGCACCGATCCC GGAGTGTTCACAGATCTGGCCTCCGTGGACAACTCTGAGTTTCAGCAGCTGCTGAAT CAGGGCGTGTCCATGTCTCATAGTACAGCCGAACCAATGCTGATGGAGTACCCCGA AGCCATTACCCGGCTGGTGACCGGCAGCCAGCGGCCCCCCGACCCCGCTCCAACTCC CCTGGGAACCAGCGGCCTGCCTAATGGGCTGTCCGGAGATGAAGACTTCTCAAGCA TCGCTGATATGGACTTTAGTGCCCTGCTGTCACAGATTTCCTCTAGTGGGCAGGGGG GTGGTGGAAGTGGCGGTGGCGGCTCCGGAGGAGGAGGAAGCGGCGGCGGTGGTAG TGGCGGCGGCGGAAGCGGAGGCGGCGGCTCCACCAAGGCCGAGAGAGGCGGCCTG AGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGCTTCATCAAGAGACAGCTGGTGGAAACCCGGCAGAT CACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGATCCTGGACTCCCGGATGAACACTAAGTACGACGAGA ATGACAAGCTGATCCGGGAAGTGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCAAGCTGGTGTCC GATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGTTTTACAAAGTGCGCGAGATCAACAACTACCACCAC GCCCACGACGCCTACCTGAACGCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATCAAAAAGTACCC TAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGACTACAAGGTGTACGACGTGCGGAAGA TGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGGAAATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCCAAGTACTTCTTCTAC AGCAACATCATGAACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCAACGGCGAGATCCG GAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAAACGGCGAAACCGGGGAGATCGTGTGGGATAAG GGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGTGCGGAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAAGTGAATATCGT GAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCAGCAAAGAGTCTATCCTGCCCAAGA GGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCCAGAAAGAAGGACTGGGACCCTAAGAAGTACGG CGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGTGGCCTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGCCAAAGTGGAAAA GGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAAGAGCTGCTGGGGATCACCATCATGG AAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAATCCCATCGACTTTCTGGAAGCCAAGGGCTACAAA GAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCTAAGTACTCCCTGTTCGAGCTGGA AAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGGCCTCTGCCGGCGAACTGCAGAAGGGAAACGAA CTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTGAACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGCCACTATGAGAAG CTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAGAAACAGCTGTTTGTGGAACAGCACAA GCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCGAGCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAGAGAGTGATCC TGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGCCTACAACAAGCACCGGGATAAG CCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAATATCATCCACCTGTTTACCCTGACCAATCTGGGA GCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACCATCGACCGGAAGAGGTACACCAGC ACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGATCCACCAGAGCATCACCGGCCTGTACGA GACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCGACagcgctGGAGGAGGTGGAAGCGGA GGAGGAGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGTAGCggacctaagaaaaagaggaaggtggc pSAMca053 dCas9(HNH → P65, 6XGS) - AA (SEQ ID NO: 196) DKKYSIGLAIGTNSVGWAVITDEYKVPSKKFKVLGNTDRHSIKKNLIGALLFD SGETAEATRLKRTARRRYTRRKNRICYLQEIFSNEMAKVDDSFFHRLEESFLVEEDKKHE RHPIFGNIVDEVAYHEKYPTIYHLRKKLVDSTDKADLRLIYLALAHMIKFRGHFLIEGDL NPDNSDVDKLFIQLVQTYNQLFEENPINASGVDAKAILSARLSKSRRLENLIAQLPGEKK NGLFGNLIALSLGLTPNFKSNFDLAEDAKLQLSKDTYDDDLDNLLAQIGDQYADLFLAA KNLSDAILLSDILRVNTEITKAPLSASMIKRYDEHHQDLTLLKALVRQQLPEKYKEIFFDQ SKNGYAGYIDGGASQEEFYKFIKPILEKMDGTEELLVKLNREDLLRKQRTFDNGSIPHQI HLGELHAILRRQEDFYPFLKDNREKIEKILTFRIPYYVGPLARGNSRFAWMTRKSEETITP WNFEEVVDKGASAQSFIERMTNFDKNLPNEKVLPKHSLLYEYFTVYNELTKVKYVTEG MRKPAFLSGEQKKAIVDLLFKTNRKVTVKQLKEDYFKKIECFDSVEISGVEDRFNASLG TYHDLLKIIKDKDFLDNEENEDILEDIVLTLTLFEDREMIEERLKTYAHLFDDKVMKQLK RRRYTGWGRLSRKLINGIRDKQSGKTILDFLKSDGFANRNFMQLIHDDSLTFKEDIQKAQ VSGQGDSLHEHIANLAGSPAIKKGILQTVKVVDELVKVMGRHKPENIVIEMARENQTTQ KGQKGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSPSGQISNQALALAPSSAPVLAQT MVPSSAMVPLAQPPAPAPVLTPGPPQSLSAPVPKSTQAGEGTLSEALLHLQFDADEDLG ALLGNSTDPGVFTDLASVDNSEFQQLLNQGVSMSHSTAEPMLMEYPEAITRLVTGSQRP PDPAPTPLGTSGLPNGLSGDEDFSSIADMDFSALLSQISSSGQGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSGG GGSGGGGSGGGGSTKAERGGLSELDKAGFIKRQLVETRQITKHVAQILDSRMNTKYDE NDKLIREVKVITLKSKLVSDFRKDFQFYKVREINNYHHAHDAYLNAVVGTALIKKYPKL ESEFVYGDYKVYDVRKMIAKSEQEIGKATAKYFFYSNIMNFFKTEITLANGEIRKRPLIET NGETGEIVWDKGRDFATVRKVLSMPQVNIVKKTEVQTGGFSKESILPKRNSDKLIARKK DWDPKKYGGFDSPTVAYSVLVVAKVEKGKSKKLKSVKELLGITIMERSSFEKNPIDFLE AKGYKEVKKDLIIKLPKYSLFELENGRKRMLASAGELQKGNELALPSKYVNFLYLASHY EKLKGSPEDNEQKQLFVEQHKHYLDEIIEQISEFSKRVILADANLDKVLSAYNKHRDKPI REQAENIIHLFTLTNLGAPAAFKYFDTTIDRKRYTSTKEVLDATLIHQSITGLYETRIDLSQ LGGD Insertions of transcriptional domains into 3 loops of dCas9 pSAMca054 dCas9(G533-vp64, 1XGS) - DNA (SEQ ID NO: 197) GACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGCCATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGCTG GGCCGTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCA ACACCGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACAGC GGCGAAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACACCA GACGGAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAG GTGGACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGATAA GAAGCACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACG AGAAGTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAAG GCCGACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCAC TTCCTGATCGAGGGCGACCTGAACCCCGACAACAGCGACGTGGACAAGCTGTTCAT CCAGCTGGTGCAGACCTACAACCAGCTGTTCGAGGAAAACCCCATCAACGCCAGCG GCGTGGACGCCAAGGCCATCCTGTCTGCCAGACTGAGCAAGAGCAGACGGCTGGAA AATCTGATCGCCCAGCTGCCCGGCGAGAAGAAGAATGGCCTGTTCGGCAACCTGAT TGCCCTGAGCCTGGGCCTGACCCCCAACTTCAAGAGCAACTTCGACCTGGCCGAGG ATGCCAAACTGCAGCTGAGCAAGGACACCTACGACGACGACCTGGACAACCTGCTG GCCCAGATCGGCGACCAGTACGCCGACCTGTTTCTGGCCGCCAAGAACCTGTCCGAC GCCATCCTGCTGAGCGACATCCTGAGAGTGAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCCCT GAGCGCCTCTATGATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCTGA AAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAG AGCAAGAACGGCTACGCCGGCTACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTA CAAGTTCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGTGA AGCTGAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATC CCCCACCAGATCCACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATTT TTACCCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCA TCCCCTACTACGTGGGCCCTCTGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACC AGAAAGAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAAGG GCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGATGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCA ACGAGAAGGTGCTGCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTATAAC GAGCTGACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAGGAGGGGGGGGCAGCGGACGGG CTGACGCATTGGACGATTTTGATCTGGATATGCTGGGAAGTGACGCCCTCGATGATT TTGACCTTGACATGCTTGGTTCGGATGCCCTTGATGACTTTGACCTCGACATGCTCGG CAGTGACGCCCTTGATGATTTCGACCTGGACATGCTGATTAACGGCGGGGGAGGCTC CATGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCGAGCAGAAAAAGGCCATCGTGGACCTGC TGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTGAAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAG AAAATCGAGTGCTTCGACTCCGTGGAAATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCAACGCC TCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAAAATTATCAAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGAC AATGAGGAAAACGAGGACATTCTGGAAGATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGA GGACAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTGAAAACCTATGCCCACCTGTTCGACGACA AAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGAGATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCG GAAGCTGATCAACGGCATCCGGGACAAGCAGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGATTTCC TGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAACTTCATGCAGCTGATCCACGACGACAGC CTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAGAAAGCCCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCT GCACGAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCAGCCCCGCCATTAAGAAGGGCATCCTGC AGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGTGAAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCCGA GAACATCGTGATCGAAATGGCCAGAGAGAACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAGAAG AACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGAAGAGGGCATCAAAGAGCTGGGCAGCC AGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGTGGAAAACACCCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAAGCTGTAC CTGTACTACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGGATATGTACGTGGACCAGGAACTGGACATCAA CCGGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACgcTATCGTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAAGGACGA CTCCATCGACAACAAGGTGCTGACCAGAAGCGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAGAGCGAC AACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGAAGATGAAGAACTACTGGCGGCAGCTGCT GAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGAGAAAGTTCGACAATCTGACCAAGGCCGAGAGAG GCGGCCTGAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGCTTCATCAAGAGACAGCTGGTGGAAACC CGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGATCCTGGACTCCCGGATGAACACTAAGTA CGACGAGAATGACAAGCTGATCCGGGAAGTGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCAAGC TGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGTTTTACAAAGTGCGCGAGATCAACAACT ACCACCACGCCCACGACGCCTACCTGAACGCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATCAAA AAGTACCCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGACTACAAGGTGTACGACGT GCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGGAAATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCCAAGTAC TTCTTCTACAGCAACATCATGAACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCAACGGC GAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAAACGGCGAAACCGGGGAGATCGTGTG GGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGTGCGGAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAAGTGA ATATCGTGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCAGCAAAGAGTCTATCCTG CCCAAGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCCAGAAAGAAGGACTGGGACCCTAAGA AGTACGGCGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGTGGCCTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGCCAAAG TGGAAAAGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAAGAGCTGCTGGGGATCAC CATCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAATCCCATCGACTTTCTGGAAGCCAAGG GCTACAAAGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCTAAGTACTCCCTGTTC GAGCTGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGGCCTCTGCCGGCGAACTGCAGAAGG GAAACGAACTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTGAACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGCCACT ATGAGAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAGAAACAGCTGTTTGTGGAA CAGCACAAGCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCGAGCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAGAG AGTGATCCTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGCCTACAACAAGCACC GGGATAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAATATCATCCACCTGTTTACCCTGACC AATCTGGGAGCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACCATCGACCGGAAGAG GTACACCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGATCCACCAGAGCATCACCG GCCTGTACGAGACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCGACagcgctGGAGGAGG TGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGTAGCggacctaagaaaaagaggaaggtggcg gccgct pSAMca054 dCas9(G533-vp64, 1XGS) - AA (SEQ ID NO: 198) DKKYSIGLAIGTNSVGWAVITDEYKVPSKKFKVLGNTDRHSIKKNLIGALLFD SGETAEATRLKRTARRRYTRRKNRICYLQEIFSNEMAKVDDSFFHRLEESFLVEEDKKHE RHPIFGNIVDEVAYHEKYPTIYHLRKKLVDSTDKADLRLIYLALAHMIKFRGHFLIEGDL NPDNSDVDKLFIQLVQTYNQLFEENPINASGVDAKAILSARLSKSRRLENLIAQLPGEKK NGLFGNLIALSLGLTPNFKSNFDLAEDAKLQLSKDTYDDDLDNLLAQIGDQYADLFLAA KNLSDAILLSDILRVNTEITKAPLSASMIKRYDEHHQDLTLLKALVRQQLPEKYKEIFFDQ SKNGYAGYIDGGASQEEFYKFIKPILEKMDGTEELLVKLNREDLLRKQRTFDNGSIPHQI HLGELHAILRRQEDFYPFLKDNREKIEKILTFRIPYYVGPLARGNSRFAWMTRKSEETITP WNFEEVVDKGASAQSFIERMTNFDKNLPNEKVLPKHSLLYEYFTVYNELTKVKYVTEG GGGGSGRADALDDFDLDMLGSDALDDFDLDMLGSDALDDFDLDMLGSDALDDFDLD MLINGGGGSMRKPAFLSGEQKKAIVDLLFKTNRKVTVKQLKEDYFKKIECFDSVEISGV EDRFNASLGTYHDLLKIIKDKDFLDNEENEDILEDIVLTLTLFEDREMIEERLKTYAHLFD DKVMKQLKRRRYTGWGRLSRKLINGIRDKQSGKTILDFLKSDGFANRNFMQLIHDDSLT FKEDIQKAQVSGQGDSLHEHIANLAGSPAIKKGILQTVKVVDELVKVMGRHKPENIVIE MARENQTTQKGQKNSRERMKRIEEGIKELGSQILKEHPVENTQLQNEKLYLYYLQNGR DMYVDQELDINRLSDYDVDAIVPQSFLKDDSIDNKVLTRSDKNRGKSDNVPSEEVVKK MKNYWRQLLNAKLITQRKFDNLTKAERGGLSELDKAGFIKRQLVETRQITKHVAQILDS RMNTKYDENDKLIREVKVITLKSKLVSDFRKDFQFYKVREINNYHHAHDAYLNAVVGT ALIKKYPKLESEFVYGDYKVYDVRKMIAKSEQEIGKATAKYFFYSNIMNFFKTEITLANG EIRKRPLIETNGETGEIVWDKGRDFATVRKVLSMPQVNIVKKTEVQTGGFSKESILPKRN SDKLIARKKDWDPKKYGGFDSPTVAYSVLVVAKVEKGKSKKLKSVKELLGITIMERSSF EKNPIDFLEAKGYKEVKKDLIIKLPKYSLFELENGRKRMLASAGELQKGNELALPSKYV NFLYLASHYEKLKGSPEDNEQKQLFVEQHKHYLDEIIEQISEFSKRVILADANLDKVLSA YNKHRDKPIREQAENIIHLFTLTNLGAPAAFKYFDTTIDRKRYTSTKEVLDATLIHQSITG LYETRIDLSQLGGDSAGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSGPKKKRKVAAA pSAMca055 dCas9(G533-vp64, 3XGS) - DNA (SEQ ID NO: 199) GACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGCCATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGCTG GGCCGTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCA ACACCGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACAGC GGCGAAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACACCA GACGGAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAG GTGGACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGATAA GAAGCACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACG AGAAGTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAAG GCCGACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCAC TTCCTGATCGAGGGCGACCTGAACCCCGACAACAGCGACGTGGACAAGCTGTTCAT CCAGCTGGTGCAGACCTACAACCAGCTGTTCGAGGAAAACCCCATCAACGCCAGCG GCGTGGACGCCAAGGCCATCCTGTCTGCCAGACTGAGCAAGAGCAGACGGCTGGAA AATCTGATCGCCCAGCTGCCCGGCGAGAAGAAGAATGGCCTGTTCGGCAACCTGAT TGCCCTGAGCCTGGGCCTGACCCCCAACTTCAAGAGCAACTTCGACCTGGCCGAGG ATGCCAAACTGCAGCTGAGCAAGGACACCTACGACGACGACCTGGACAACCTGCTG GCCCAGATCGGCGACCAGTACGCCGACCTGTTTCTGGCCGCCAAGAACCTGTCCGAC GCCATCCTGCTGAGCGACATCCTGAGAGTGAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCCCT GAGCGCCTCTATGATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCTGA AAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAG AGCAAGAACGGCTACGCCGGCTACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTA CAAGTTCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGTGA AGCTGAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATC CCCCACCAGATCCACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATTT TTACCCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCA TCCCCTACTACGTGGGCCCTCTGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACC AGAAAGAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAAGG GCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGATGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCA ACGAGAAGGTGCTGCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTATAAC GAGCTGACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAGGAGGGGGGGGCAGCGGACGGG CTGACGCATTGGACGATTTTGATCTGGATATGCTGGGAAGTGACGCCCTCGATGATT TTGACCTTGACATGCTTGGTTCGGATGCCCTTGATGACTTTGACCTCGACATGCTCGG CAGTGACGCCCTTGATGATTTCGACCTGGACATGCTGATTAACGGCGGGGGAGGCTC CATGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCGAGCAGAAAAAGGCCATCGTGGACCTGC TGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTGAAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAG AAAATCGAGTGCTTCGACTCCGTGGAAATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCAACGCC TCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAAAATTATCAAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGAC AATGAGGAAAACGAGGACATTCTGGAAGATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGA GGACAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTGAAAACCTATGCCCACCTGTTCGACGACA AAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGAGATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCG GAAGCTGATCAACGGCATCCGGGACAAGCAGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGATTTCC TGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAACTTCATGCAGCTGATCCACGACGACAGC CTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAGAAAGCCCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCT GCACGAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCAGCCCCGCCATTAAGAAGGGCATCCTGC AGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGTGAAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCCGA GAACATCGTGATCGAAATGGCCAGAGAGAACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAGAAG AACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGAAGAGGGCATCAAAGAGCTGGGCAGCC AGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGTGGAAAACACCCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAAGCTGTAC CTGTACTACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGGATATGTACGTGGACCAGGAACTGGACATCAA CCGGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACgcTATCGTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAAGGACGA CTCCATCGACAACAAGGTGCTGACCAGAAGCGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAGAGCGAC AACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGAAGATGAAGAACTACTGGCGGCAGCTGCT GAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGAGAAAGTTCGACAATCTGACCAAGGCCGAGAGAG GCGGCCTGAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGCTTCATCAAGAGACAGCTGGTGGAAACC CGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGATCCTGGACTCCCGGATGAACACTAAGTA CGACGAGAATGACAAGCTGATCCGGGAAGTGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCAAGC TGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGTTTTACAAAGTGCGCGAGATCAACAACT ACCACCACGCCCACGACGCCTACCTGAACGCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATCAAA AAGTACCCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGACTACAAGGTGTACGACGT GCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGGAAATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCCAAGTAC TTCTTCTACAGCAACATCATGAACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCAACGGC GAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAAACGGCGAAACCGGGGAGATCGTGTG GGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGTGCGGAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAAGTGA ATATCGTGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCAGCAAAGAGTCTATCCTG CCCAAGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCCAGAAAGAAGGACTGGGACCCTAAGA AGTACGGCGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGTGGCCTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGCCAAAG TGGAAAAGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAAGAGCTGCTGGGGATCAC CATCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAATCCCATCGACTTTCTGGAAGCCAAGG GCTACAAAGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCTAAGTACTCCCTGTTC GAGCTGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGGCCTCTGCCGGCGAACTGCAGAAGG GAAACGAACTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTGAACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGCCACT ATGAGAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAGAAACAGCTGTTTGTGGAA CAGCACAAGCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCGAGCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAGAG AGTGATCCTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGCCTACAACAAGCACC GGGATAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAATATCATCCACCTGTTTACCCTGACC AATCTGGGAGCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACCATCGACCGGAAGAG GTACACCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGATCCACCAGAGCATCACCG GCCTGTACGAGACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCGACagcgctGGAGGAGG TGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGTAGCggacctaagaaaaagaggaaggtggcg gccgctgctag pSAMca055 dCas9(G533-vp64, 3XGS) - AA (SEQ ID NO: 200) DKKYSIGLAIGTNSVGWAVITDEYKVPSKKFKVLGNTDRHSIKKNLIGALLFD SGETAEATRLKRTARRRYTRRKNRICYLQEIFSNEMAKVDDSFFHRLEESFLVEEDKKHE RHPIFGNIVDEVAYHEKYPTIYHLRKKLVDSTDKADLRLIYLALAHMIKFRGHFLIEGDL NPDNSDVDKLFIQLVQTYNQLFEENPINASGVDAKAILSARLSKSRRLENLIAQLPGEKK NGLFGNLIALSLGLTPNFKSNFDLAEDAKLQLSKDTYDDDLDNLLAQIGDQYADLFLAA KNLSDAILLSDILRVNTEITKAPLSASMIKRYDEHHQDLTLLKALVRQQLPEKYKEIFFDQ SKNGYAGYIDGGASQEEFYKFIKPILEKMDGTEELLVKLNREDLLRKQRTFDNGSIPHQI HLGELHAILRRQEDFYPFLKDNREKIEKILTFRIPYYVGPLARGNSRFAWMTRKSEETITP WNFEEVVDKGASAQSFIERMTNFDKNLPNEKVLPKHSLLYEYFTVYNELTKVKYVTEG GGGGSGRADALDDFDLDMLGSDALDDFDLDMLGSDALDDFDLDMLGSDALDDFDLD MLINGGGGSMRKPAFLSGEQKKAIVDLLFKTNRKVTVKQLKEDYFKKIECFDSVEISGV EDRFNASLGTYHDLLKIIKDKDFLDNEENEDILEDIVLTLTLFEDREMIEERLKTYAHLFD DKVMKQLKRRRYTGWGRLSRKLINGIRDKQSGKTILDFLKSDGFANRNFMQLIHDDSLT FKEDIQKAQVSGQGDSLHEHIANLAGSPAIKKGILQTVKVVDELVKVMGRHKPENIVIE MARENQTTQKGQKNSRERMKRIEEGIKELGSQILKEHPVENTQLQNEKLYLYYLQNGR DMYVDQELDINRLSDYDVDAIVPQSFLKDDSIDNKVLTRSDKNRGKSDNVPSEEVVKK MKNYWRQLLNAKLITQRKFDNLTKAERGGLSELDKAGFIKRQLVETRQITKHVAQILDS RMNTKYDENDKLIREVKVITLKSKLVSDFRKDFQFYKVREINNYHHAHDAYLNAVVGT ALIKKYPKLESEFVYGDYKVYDVRKMIAKSEQEIGKATAKYFFYSNIMNFFKTEITLANG EIRKRPLIETNGETGEIVWDKGRDFATVRKVLSMPQVNIVKKTEVQTGGFSKESILPKRN SDKLIARKKDWDPKKYGGFDSPTVAYSVLVVAKVEKGKSKKLKSVKELLGITIMERSSF EKNPIDFLEAKGYKEVKKDLIIKLPKYSLFELENGRKRMLASAGELQKGNELALPSKYV NFLYLASHYEKLKGSPEDNEQKQLFVEQHKHYLDEIIEQISEFSKRVILADANLDKVLSA YNKHRDKPIREQAENIIHLFTLTNLGAPAAFKYFDTTIDRKRYTSTKEVLDATLIHQSITG LYETRIDLSQLGGDSAGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSGPKKKRKVAAAA pSAMca056 dCas9(G533-P65, 1XGS) - DNA (SEQ ID NO: 201) GACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGCCATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGCTG GGCCGTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCA ACACCGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACAGC GGCGAAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACACCA GACGGAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAG GTGGACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGATAA GAAGCACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACG AGAAGTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAAG GCCGACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCAC TTCCTGATCGAGGGCGACCTGAACCCCGACAACAGCGACGTGGACAAGCTGTTCAT CCAGCTGGTGCAGACCTACAACCAGCTGTTCGAGGAAAACCCCATCAACGCCAGCG GCGTGGACGCCAAGGCCATCCTGTCTGCCAGACTGAGCAAGAGCAGACGGCTGGAA AATCTGATCGCCCAGCTGCCCGGCGAGAAGAAGAATGGCCTGTTCGGCAACCTGAT TGCCCTGAGCCTGGGCCTGACCCCCAACTTCAAGAGCAACTTCGACCTGGCCGAGG ATGCCAAACTGCAGCTGAGCAAGGACACCTACGACGACGACCTGGACAACCTGCTG GCCCAGATCGGCGACCAGTACGCCGACCTGTTTCTGGCCGCCAAGAACCTGTCCGAC GCCATCCTGCTGAGCGACATCCTGAGAGTGAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCCCT GAGCGCCTCTATGATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCTGA AAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAG AGCAAGAACGGCTACGCCGGCTACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTA CAAGTTCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGTGA AGCTGAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATC CCCCACCAGATCCACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATTT TTACCCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCA TCCCCTACTACGTGGGCCCTCTGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACC AGAAAGAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAAGG GCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGATGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCA ACGAGAAGGTGCTGCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTATAAC GAGCTGACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAGGAGGGGGAGGCAGCCCTTCAG GGCAGATCAGCAACCAGGCCCTGGCTCTGGCCCCTAGCTCCGCTCCAGTGCTGGCCC AGACTATGGTGCCCTCTAGTGCTATGGTGCCTCTGGCCCAGCCACCTGCTCCAGCCC CTGTGCTGACCCCAGGACCACCCCAGTCACTGAGCGCTCCAGTGCCCAAGTCTACAC AGGCCGGCGAGGGGACTCTGAGTGAAGCTCTGCTGCACCTGCAGTTCGACGCTGAT GAGGACCTGGGAGCTCTGCTGGGGAACAGCACCGATCCCGGAGTGTTCACAGATCT GGCCTCCGTGGACAACTCTGAGTTTCAGCAGCTGCTGAATCAGGGCGTGTCCATGTC TCATAGTACAGCCGAACCAATGCTGATGGAGTACCCCGAAGCCATTACCCGGCTGG TGACCGGCAGCCAGCGGCCCCCCGACCCCGCTCCAACTCCCCTGGGAACCAGCGGC CTGCCTAATGGGCTGTCCGGAGATGAAGACTTCTCAAGCATCGCTGATATGGACTTT AGTGCCCTGCTGTCACAGATTTCCTCTAGTGGGCAGGGAGGGGGGGGCAGCATGAG AAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCGAGCAGAAAAAGGCCATCGTGGACCTGCTGTTCA AGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTGAAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAAAATC GAGTGCTTCGACTCCGTGGAAATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCAACGCCTCCCTG GGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAAAATTATCAAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGACAATGA GGAAAACGAGGACATTCTGGAAGATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGAGGACA GAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTGAAAACCTATGCCCACCTGTTCGACGACAAAGTG ATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGAGATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGC TGATCAACGGCATCCGGGACAAGCAGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGATTTCCTGAAG TCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAACTTCATGCAGCTGATCCACGACGACAGCCTGAC CTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAGAAAGCCCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCTGCACG AGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCAGCCCCGCCATTAAGAAGGGCATCCTGCAGACA GTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGTGAAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCCGAGAACAT CGTGATCGAAATGGCCAGAGAGAACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAGAAGAACAGC CGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGAAGAGGGCATCAAAGAGCTGGGCAGCCAGATCC TGAAAGAACACCCCGTGGAAAACACCCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAAGCTGTACCTGTAC TACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGGATATGTACGTGGACCAGGAACTGGACATCAACCGGCT GTCCGACTACGATGTGGACgcTATCGTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAAGGACGACTCCATC GACAACAAGGTGCTGACCAGAAGCGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAGAGCGACAACGTGC CCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGAAGATGAAGAACTACTGGCGGCAGCTGCTGAACGCC AAGCTGATTACCCAGAGAAAGTTCGACAATCTGACCAAGGCCGAGAGAGGCGGCCT GAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGCTTCATCAAGAGACAGCTGGTGGAAACCCGGCAGA TCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGATCCTGGACTCCCGGATGAACACTAAGTACGACGAG AATGACAAGCTGATCCGGGAAGTGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCAAGCTGGTGTC CGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGTTTTACAAAGTGCGCGAGATCAACAACTACCACCA CGCCCACGACGCCTACCTGAACGCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATCAAAAAGTACC CTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGACTACAAGGTGTACGACGTGCGGAAG ATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGGAAATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCCAAGTACTTCTTCTA CAGCAACATCATGAACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCAACGGCGAGATCC GGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAAACGGCGAAACCGGGGAGATCGTGTGGGATAA GGGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGTGCGGAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAAGTGAATATCG TGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCAGCAAAGAGTCTATCCTGCCCAAG AGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCCAGAAAGAAGGACTGGGACCCTAAGAAGTACG GCGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGTGGCCTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGCCAAAGTGGAAA AGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAAGAGCTGCTGGGGATCACCATCATG GAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAATCCCATCGACTTTCTGGAAGCCAAGGGCTACAA AGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCTAAGTACTCCCTGTTCGAGCTGG AAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGGCCTCTGCCGGCGAACTGCAGAAGGGAAACGA ACTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTGAACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGCCACTATGAGAA GCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAGAAACAGCTGTTTGTGGAACAGCACA AGCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCGAGCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAGAGAGTGATC CTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGCCTACAACAAGCACCGGGATAA GCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAATATCATCCACCTGTTTACCCTGACCAATCTGGG AGCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACCATCGACCGGAAGAGGTACACCA GCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGATCCACCAGAGCATCACCGGCCTGTAC GAGACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCGACagcgctGGAGGAGGTGGAAGCG GAGGAGGAGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGTAGCggacctaagaaaaagaggaaggtggcggccgctg pSAMca056 dCas9(G533-P65, 1XGS) - AA (SEQ ID NO: 202) DKKYSIGLAIGTNSVGWAVITDEYKVPSKKFKVLGNTDRHSIKKNLIGALLFD SGETAEATRLKRTARRRYTRRKNRICYLQEIFSNEMAKVDDSFFHRLEESFLVEEDKKHE RHPIFGNIVDEVAYHEKYPTIYHLRKKLVDSTDKADLRLIYLALAHMIKFRGHFLIEGDL NPDNSDVDKLFIQLVQTYNQLFEENPINASGVDAKAILSARLSKSRRLENLIAQLPGEKK NGLFGNLIALSLGLTPNFKSNFDLAEDAKLQLSKDTYDDDLDNLLAQIGDQYADLFLAA KNLSDAILLSDILRVNTEITKAPLSASMIKRYDEHHQDLTLLKALVRQQLPEKYKEIFFDQ SKNGYAGYIDGGASQEEFYKFIKPILEKMDGTEELLVKLNREDLLRKQRTFDNGSIPHQI HLGELHAILRRQEDFYPFLKDNREKIEKILTFRIPYYVGPLARGNSRFAWMTRKSEETITP WNFEEVVDKGASAQSFIERMTNFDKNLPNEKVLPKHSLLYEYFTVYNELTKVKYVTEG GGGGSPSGQISNQALALAPSSAPVLAQTMVPSSAMVPLAQPPAPAPVLTPGPPQSLSAPV PKSTQAGEGTLSEALLHLQFDADEDLGALLGNSTDPGVFTDLASVDNSEFQQLLNQGVS MSHSTAEPMLMEYPEAITRLVTGSQRPPDPAPTPLGTSGLPNGLSGDEDFSSIADMDFSA LLSQISSSGQGGGGSMRKPAFLSGEQKKAIVDLLFKTNRKVTVKQLKEDYFKKIECFDSV EISGVEDRFNASLGTYHDLLKIIKDKDFLDNEENEDILEDIVLTLTLFEDREMIEERLKTY AHLFDDKVMKQLKRRRYTGWGRLSRKLINGIRDKQSGKTILDFLKSDGFANRNFMQLI HDDSLTFKEDIQKAQVSGQGDSLHEHIANLAGSPAIKKGILQTVKVVDELVKVMGRHKP ENIVIEMARENQTTQKGQKNSRERMKRIEEGIKELGSQILKEHPVENTQLQNEKLYLYYL QNGRDMYVDQELDINRLSDYDVDAIVPQSFLKDDSIDNKVLTRSDKNRGKSDNVPSEE VVKKMKNYWRQLLNAKLITQRKFDNLTKAERGGLSELDKAGFIKRQLVETRQITKHVA QILDSRMNTKYDENDKLIREVKVITLKSKLVSDFRKDFQFYKVREINNYHHAHDAYLNA VVGTALIKKYPKLESEFVYGDYKVYDVRKMIAKSEQEIGKATAKYFFYSNIMNFFKTEIT LANGEIRKRPLIETNGETGEIVWDKGRDFATVRKVLSMPQVNIVKKTEVQTGGFSKESIL PKRNSDKLIARKKDWDPKKYGGFDSPTVAYSVLVVAKVEKGKSKKLKSVKELLGITIM ERSSFEKNPIDFLEAKGYKEVKKDLIIKLPKYSLFELENGRKRMLASAGELQKGNELALP SKYVNFLYLASHYEKLKGSPEDNEQKQLFVEQHKHYLDEIIEQISEFSKRVILADANLDK VLSAYNKHRDKPIREQAENIIHLFTLTNLGAPAAFKYFDTTIDRKRYTSTKEVLDATLIHQ SITGLYETRIDLSQLGGDSAGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSGPKKKRKVAAA pSAMca057 dCas9(G533-P65, 3XGS) - DNA (SEQ ID NO: 203) GgccaccatgGACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGCCATCGGCACCAACTCTG TGGGCTGGGCCGTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTG CTGGGCAACACCGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTT CGACAGCGGCGAAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGA TACACCAGACGGAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGAT GGCCAAGGTGGACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAG AGGATAAGAAGCACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCC TACCACGAGAAGTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCAC CGACAAGGCCGACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCG GGGCCACTTCCTGATCGAGGGCGACCTGAACCCCGACAACAGCGACGTGGACAAGC TGTTCATCCAGCTGGTGCAGACCTACAACCAGCTGTTCGAGGAAAACCCCATCAACG CCAGCGGCGTGGACGCCAAGGCCATCCTGTCTGCCAGACTGAGCAAGAGCAGACGG CTGGAAAATCTGATCGCCCAGCTGCCCGGCGAGAAGAAGAATGGCCTGTTCGGCAA CCTGATTGCCCTGAGCCTGGGCCTGACCCCCAACTTCAAGAGCAACTTCGACCTGGC CGAGGATGCCAAACTGCAGCTGAGCAAGGACACCTACGACGACGACCTGGACAACC TGCTGGCCCAGATCGGCGACCAGTACGCCGACCTGTTTCTGGCCGCCAAGAACCTGT CCGACGCCATCCTGCTGAGCGACATCCTGAGAGTGAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCC CCCCTGAGCGCCTCTATGATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCT GCTGAAAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGA CCAGAGCAAGAACGGCTACGCCGGCTACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAG TTCTACAAGTTCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGAACTGCT CGTGAAGCTGAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCA GCATCCCCCACCAGATCCACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAA GATTTTTACCCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTC CGCATCCCCTACTACGTGGGCCCTCTGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGAT GACCAGAAAGAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGAC AAGGGCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGATGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCT GCCCAACGAGAAGGTGCTGCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGT ATAACGAGCTGACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAGGCGGGGGAGGCTCCGG TGGTGGGGGCAGCGGAGGGGGGGGCAGCCCTTCAGGGCAGATCAGCAACCAGGCC CTGGCTCTGGCCCCTAGCTCCGCTCCAGTGCTGGCCCAGACTATGGTGCCCTCTAGT GCTATGGTGCCTCTGGCCCAGCCACCTGCTCCAGCCCCTGTGCTGACCCCAGGACCA CCCCAGTCACTGAGCGCTCCAGTGCCCAAGTCTACACAGGCCGGCGAGGGGACTCT GAGTGAAGCTCTGCTGCACCTGCAGTTCGACGCTGATGAGGACCTGGGAGCTCTGCT GGGGAACAGCACCGATCCCGGAGTGTTCACAGATCTGGCCTCCGTGGACAACTCTG AGTTTCAGCAGCTGCTGAATCAGGGCGTGTCCATGTCTCATAGTACAGCCGAACCAA TGCTGATGGAGTACCCCGAAGCCATTACCCGGCTGGTGACCGGCAGCCAGCGGCCC CCCGACCCCGCTCCAACTCCCCTGGGAACCAGCGGCCTGCCTAATGGGCTGTCCGGA GATGAAGACTTCTCAAGCATCGCTGATATGGACTTTAGTGCCCTGCTGTCACAGATT TCCTCTAGTGGGCAGGGCGGGGGAGGCTCCGGTGGTGGGGGCAGCGGAGGGGGGG GCAGCATGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCGAGCAGAAAAAGGCCATCGTGGAC CTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTGAAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTT CAAGAAAATCGAGTGCTTCGACTCCGTGGAAATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCA ACGCCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAAAATTATCAAGGACAAGGACTTCC TGGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGACATTCTGGAAGATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTG TTTGAGGACAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTGAAAACCTATGCCCACCTGTTCGA CGACAAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGAGATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTG AGCCGGAAGCTGATCAACGGCATCCGGGACAAGCAGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGA TTTCCTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAACTTCATGCAGCTGATCCACGACGA CAGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAGAAAGCCCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATA GCCTGCACGAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCAGCCCCGCCATTAAGAAGGGCATC CTGCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGTGAAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCC CGAGAACATCGTGATCGAAATGGCCAGAGAGAACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAG AAGAACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGAAGAGGGCATCAAAGAGCTGGGCA GCCAGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGTGGAAAACACCCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAAGCTG TACCTGTACTACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGGATATGTACGTGGACCAGGAACTGGACAT CAACCGGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACgcTATCGTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAAGGA CGACTCCATCGACAACAAGGTGCTGACCAGAAGCGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAGAGC GACAACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGAAGATGAAGAACTACTGGCGGCAGCT GCTGAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGAGAAAGTTCGACAATCTGACCAAGGCCGAGA GAGGCGGCCTGAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGCTTCATCAAGAGACAGCTGGTGGAA ACCCGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGATCCTGGACTCCCGGATGAACACTAA GTACGACGAGAATGACAAGCTGATCCGGGAAGTGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCA AGCTGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGTTTTACAAAGTGCGCGAGATCAACA ACTACCACCACGCCCACGACGCCTACCTGAACGCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATC AAAAAGTACCCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGACTACAAGGTGTACGA CGTGCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGGAAATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCCAAG TACTTCTTCTACAGCAACATCATGAACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCAAC GGCGAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAAACGGCGAAACCGGGGAGATCG TGTGGGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGTGCGGAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAA GTGAATATCGTGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCAGCAAAGAGTCTAT CCTGCCCAAGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCCAGAAAGAAGGACTGGGACCCTA AGAAGTACGGCGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGTGGCCTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGCCA AAGTGGAAAAGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAAGAGCTGCTGGGGAT CACCATCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAATCCCATCGACTTTCTGGAAGCCA AGGGCTACAAAGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCTAAGTACTCCCTG TTCGAGCTGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGGCCTCTGCCGGCGAACTGCAGAA GGGAAACGAACTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTGAACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGCCA CTATGAGAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAGAAACAGCTGTTTGTGG AACAGCACAAGCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCGAGCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAG AGAGTGATCCTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGCCTACAACAAGCA CCGGGATAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAATATCATCCACCTGTTTACCCTGA CCAATCTGGGAGCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACCATCGACCGGAAGA GGTACACCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGATCCACCAGAGCATCACC GGCCTGTACGAGACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCGACagcgctGGAGGAG GTGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGTAGCggacctaagaaaaagaggaaggtggc ggccgctgctagcGGCAGTGGA pSAMca057 dCas9(G533-P65, 3XGS) - AA (SEQ ID NO: 204) DKKYSIGLAIGTNSVGWAVITDEYKVPSKKFKVLGNTDRHSIKKNLIGALLFD SGETAEATRLKRTARRRYTRRKNRICYLQEIFSNEMAKVDDSFFHRLEESFLVEEDKKHE RHPIFGNIVDEVAYHEKYPTIYHLRKKLVDSTDKADLRLIYLALAHMIKFRGHFLIEGDL NPDNSDVDKLFIQLVQTYNQLFEENPINASGVDAKAILSARLSKSRRLENLIAQLPGEKK NGLFGNLIALSLGLTPNFKSNFDLAEDAKLQLSKDTYDDDLDNLLAQIGDQYADLFLAA KNLSDAILLSDILRVNTEITKAPLSASMIKRYDEHHQDLTLLKALVRQQLPEKYKEIFFDQ SKNGYAGYIDGGASQEEFYKFIKPILEKMDGTEELLVKLNREDLLRKQRTFDNGSIPHQI HLGELHAILRRQEDFYPFLKDNREKIEKILTFRIPYYVGPLARGNSRFAWMTRKSEETITP WNFEEVVDKGASAQSFIERMTNFDKNLPNEKVLPKHSLLYEYFTVYNELTKVKYVTEG GGGGSGGGGSGGGGSPSGQISNQALALAPSSAPVLAQTMVPSSAMVPLAQPPAPAPVLT PGPPQSLSAPVPKSTQAGEGTLSEALLHLQFDADEDLGALLGNSTDPGVFTDLASVDNSE FQQLLNQGVSMSHSTAEPMLMEYPEAITRLVTGSQRPPDPAPTPLGTSGLPNGLSGDEDF SSIADMDFSALLSQISSSGQGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSMRKPAFLSGEQKKAIVDLLFKTNR KVTVKQLKEDYFKKIECFDSVEISGVEDRFNASLGTYHDLLKIIKDKDFLDNEENEDILE DIVLTLTLFEDREMIEERLKTYAHLFDDKVMKQLKRRRYTGWGRLSRKLINGIRDKQSG KTILDFLKSDGFANRNFMQLIHDDSLTFKEDIQKAQVSGQGDSLHEHIANLAGSPAIKKG ILQTVKVVDELVKVMGRHKPENIVIEMARENQTTQKGQKNSRERMKRIEEGIKELGSQI LKEHPVENTQLQNEKLYLYYLQNGRDMYVDQELDINRLSDYDVDAIVPQSFLKDDSID NKVLTRSDKNRGKSDNVPSEEVVKKMKNYWRQLLNAKLITQRKFDNLTKAERGGLSE LDKAGFIKRQLVETRQITKHVAQILDSRMNTKYDENDKLIREVKVITLKSKLVSDFRKDF QFYKVREINNYHHAHDAYLNAVVGTALIKKYPKLESEFVYGDYKVYDVRKMIAKSEQE IGKATAKYFFYSNIMNFFKTEITLANGEIRKRPLIETNGETGEIVWDKGRDFATVRKVLS MPQVNIVKKTEVQTGGFSKESILPKRNSDKLIARKKDWDPKKYGGFDSPTVAYSVLVV AKVEKGKSKKLKSVKELLGITIMERSSFEKNPIDFLEAKGYKEVKKDLIIKLPKYSLFELE NGRKRMLASAGELQKGNELALPSKYVNFLYLASHYEKLKGSPEDNEQKQLFVEQHKH YLDEIIEQISEFSKRVILADANLDKVLSAYNKHRDKPIREQAENIIHLFTLTNLGAPAAFKY FDTTIDRKRYTSTKEVLDATLIHQSITGLYETRIDLSQLGGDSAGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSG PKKKRKVAAAASGS pSAMca058 dCas9(F575-vp64, 1XGS) - DNA (SEQ ID NO: 205) GACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGCCATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGCTG GGCCGTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCA ACACCGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACAGC GGCGAAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACACCA GACGGAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAG GTGGACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGATAA GAAGCACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACG AGAAGTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAAG GCCGACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCAC TTCCTGATCGAGGGCGACCTGAACCCCGACAACAGCGACGTGGACAAGCTGTTCAT CCAGCTGGTGCAGACCTACAACCAGCTGTTCGAGGAAAACCCCATCAACGCCAGCG GCGTGGACGCCAAGGCCATCCTGTCTGCCAGACTGAGCAAGAGCAGACGGCTGGAA AATCTGATCGCCCAGCTGCCCGGCGAGAAGAAGAATGGCCTGTTCGGCAACCTGAT TGCCCTGAGCCTGGGCCTGACCCCCAACTTCAAGAGCAACTTCGACCTGGCCGAGG ATGCCAAACTGCAGCTGAGCAAGGACACCTACGACGACGACCTGGACAACCTGCTG GCCCAGATCGGCGACCAGTACGCCGACCTGTTTCTGGCCGCCAAGAACCTGTCCGAC GCCATCCTGCTGAGCGACATCCTGAGAGTGAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCCCT GAGCGCCTCTATGATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCTGA AAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAG AGCAAGAACGGCTACGCCGGCTACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTA CAAGTTCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGTGA AGCTGAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATC CCCCACCAGATCCACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATTT TTACCCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCA TCCCCTACTACGTGGGCCCTCTGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACC AGAAAGAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAAGG GCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGATGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCA ACGAGAAGGTGCTGCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTATAAC GAGCTGACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAATGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAG CGGCGAGCAGAAAAAGGCCATCGTGGACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGA CCGTGAAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCTTCGGAGGGGGA GGCAGCGGACGGGCTGACGCATTGGACGATTTTGATCTGGATATGCTGGGAAGTGA CGCCCTCGATGATTTTGACCTTGACATGCTTGGTTCGGATGCCCTTGATGACTTTGAC CTCGACATGCTCGGCAGTGACGCCCTTGATGATTTCGACCTGGACATGCTGATTAAC GGCGGGGGAGGCTCCGACTCCGTGGAAATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCAACGC CTCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAAAATTATCAAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGA CAATGAGGAAAACGAGGACATTCTGGAAGATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTG AGGACAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTGAAAACCTATGCCCACCTGTTCGACGAC AAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGAGATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCC GGAAGCTGATCAACGGCATCCGGGACAAGCAGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGATTTC CTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAACTTCATGCAGCTGATCCACGACGACAG CCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAGAAAGCCCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAGCC TGCACGAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCAGCCCCGCCATTAAGAAGGGCATCCTG CAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGTGAAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCCGA GAACATCGTGATCGAAATGGCCAGAGAGAACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAGAAG AACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGAAGAGGGCATCAAAGAGCTGGGCAGCC AGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGTGGAAAACACCCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAAGCTGTAC CTGTACTACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGGATATGTACGTGGACCAGGAACTGGACATCAA CCGGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACgcTATCGTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAAGGACGA CTCCATCGACAACAAGGTGCTGACCAGAAGCGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAGAGCGAC AACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGAAGATGAAGAACTACTGGCGGCAGCTGCT GAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGAGAAAGTTCGACAATCTGACCAAGGCCGAGAGAG GCGGCCTGAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGCTTCATCAAGAGACAGCTGGTGGAAACC CGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGATCCTGGACTCCCGGATGAACACTAAGTA CGACGAGAATGACAAGCTGATCCGGGAAGTGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCAAGC TGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGTTTTACAAAGTGCGCGAGATCAACAACT ACCACCACGCCCACGACGCCTACCTGAACGCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATCAAA AAGTACCCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGACTACAAGGTGTACGACGT GCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGGAAATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCCAAGTAC TTCTTCTACAGCAACATCATGAACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCAACGGC GAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAAACGGCGAAACCGGGGAGATCGTGTG GGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGTGCGGAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAAGTGA ATATCGTGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCAGCAAAGAGTCTATCCTG CCCAAGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCCAGAAAGAAGGACTGGGACCCTAAGA AGTACGGCGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGTGGCCTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGCCAAAG TGGAAAAGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAAGAGCTGCTGGGGATCAC CATCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAATCCCATCGACTTTCTGGAAGCCAAGG GCTACAAAGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCTAAGTACTCCCTGTTC GAGCTGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGGCCTCTGCCGGCGAACTGCAGAAGG GAAACGAACTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTGAACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGCCACT ATGAGAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAGAAACAGCTGTTTGTGGAA CAGCACAAGCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCGAGCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAGAG AGTGATCCTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGCCTACAACAAGCACC GGGATAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAATATCATCCACCTGTTTACCCTGACC AATCTGGGAGCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACCATCGACCGGAAGAG GTACACCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGATCCACCAGAGCATCACCG GCCTGTACGAGACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCGACagcgctGGAGGAGG TGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGTAGCggacctaagaaaaagaggaaggtggcg pSAMca058 dCas9(F575-vp64, 1XGS) - AA (SEQ ID NO: 206) DKKYSIGLAIGTNSVGWAVITDEYKVPSKKFKVLGNTDRHSIKKNLIGALLFD SGETAEATRLKRTARRRYTRRKNRICYLQEIFSNEMAKVDDSFFHRLEESFLVEEDKKHE RHPIFGNIVDEVAYHEKYPTIYHLRKKLVDSTDKADLRLIYLALAHMIKFRGHFLIEGDL NPDNSDVDKLFIQLVQTYNQLFEENPINASGVDAKAILSARLSKSRRLENLIAQLPGEKK NGLFGNLIALSLGLTPNFKSNFDLAEDAKLQLSKDTYDDDLDNLLAQIGDQYADLFLAA KNLSDAILLSDILRVNTEITKAPLSASMIKRYDEHHQDLTLLKALVRQQLPEKYKEIFFDQ SKNGYAGYIDGGASQEEFYKFIKPILEKMDGTEELLVKLNREDLLRKQRTFDNGSIPHQI HLGELHAILRRQEDFYPFLKDNREKIEKILTFRIPYYVGPLARGNSRFAWMTRKSEETITP WNFEEVVDKGASAQSFIERMTNFDKNLPNEKVLPKHSLLYEYFTVYNELTKVKYVTEG MRKPAFLSGEQKKAIVDLLFKTNRKVTVKQLKEDYFKKIECFGGGGSGRADALDDFDL DMLGSDALDDFDLDMLGSDALDDFDLDMLGSDALDDFDLDMLINGGGGSDSVEISGVE DRFNASLGTYHDLLKIIKDKDFLDNEENEDILEDIVLTLTLFEDREMIEERLKTYAHLFDD KVMKQLKRRRYTGWGRLSRKLINGIRDKQSGKTILDFLKSDGFANRNFMQLIHDDSLTF KEDIQKAQVSGQGDSLHEHIANLAGSPAIKKGILQTVKVVDELVKVMGRHKPENIVIEM ARENQTTQKGQKNSRERMKRIEEGIKELGSQILKEHPVENTQLQNEKLYLYYLQNGRD MYVDQELDINRLSDYDVDAIVPQSFLKDDSIDNKVLTRSDKNRGKSDNVPSEEVVKKM KNYWRQLLNAKLITQRKFDNLTKAERGGLSELDKAGFIKRQLVETRQITKHVAQILDSR MNTKYDENDKLIREVKVITLKSKLVSDFRKDFQFYKVREINNYHHAHDAYLNAVVGTA LIKKYPKLESEFVYGDYKVYDVRKMIAKSEQEIGKATAKYFFYSNIMNFFKTEITLANGE IRKRPLIETNGETGEIVWDKGRDFATVRKVLSMPQVNIVKKTEVQTGGFSKESILPKRNS DKLIARKKDWDPKKYGGFDSPTVAYSVLVVAKVEKGKSKKLKSVKELLGITIMERSSFE KNPIDFLEAKGYKEVKKDLIIKLPKYSLFELENGRKRMLASAGELQKGNELALPSKYVN FLYLASHYEKLKGSPEDNEQKQLFVEQHKHYLDEIIEQISEFSKRVILADANLDKVLSAY NKHRDKPIREQAENIIHLFTLTNLGAPAAFKYFDTTIDRKRYTSTKEVLDATLIHQSITGL YETRIDLSQLGGDSAGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSGPKKKRKVA pSAMca059 dCas9(F575-vp64, 3XGS) - DNA (SEQ ID NO: 207) CAGCATCGGCCTGGCCATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGCTGGGCCGTGATCA CCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCAACACCGACCGG CACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACAGCGGCGAAACAGC CGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACACCAGACGGAAGAAC CGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAGGTGGACGACAG CTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGATAAGAAGCACGAGC GGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACGAGAAGTACCCC ACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAAGGCCGACCTGCG GCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCACTTCCTGATCGA GGGCGACCTGAACCCCGACAACAGCGACGTGGACAAGCTGTTCATCCAGCTGGTGC AGACCTACAACCAGCTGTTCGAGGAAAACCCCATCAACGCCAGCGGCGTGGACGCC AAGGCCATCCTGTCTGCCAGACTGAGCAAGAGCAGACGGCTGGAAAATCTGATCGC CCAGCTGCCCGGCGAGAAGAAGAATGGCCTGTTCGGCAACCTGATTGCCCTGAGCC TGGGCCTGACCCCCAACTTCAAGAGCAACTTCGACCTGGCCGAGGATGCCAAACTG CAGCTGAGCAAGGACACCTACGACGACGACCTGGACAACCTGCTGGCCCAGATCGG CGACCAGTACGCCGACCTGTTTCTGGCCGCCAAGAACCTGTCCGACGCCATCCTGCT GAGCGACATCCTGAGAGTGAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCCCTGAGCGCCTCTA TGATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCTGAAAGCTCTCGTG CGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAGAGCAAGAACGG CTACGCCGGCTACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTACAAGTTCATCA AGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGTGAAGCTGAACAGA GAGGACCTGCTGCGGAAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATCCCCCACCAGAT CCACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATTTTTACCCATTCCT GAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCATCCCCTACTACG TGGGCCCTCTGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACCAGAAAGAGCGAG GAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAAGGGCGCTTCCGCCCA GAGCTTCATCGAGCGGATGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCAACGAGAAGGTGC TGCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTATAACGAGCTGACCAAA GTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAATGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCGAGCAGAA AAAGGCCATCGTGGACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTGAAGCAGC TGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCTTCGGCGGGGGAGGCTCCGGTGGT GGGGGCAGCGGAGGGGGGGGCAGCGGACGGGCTGACGCATTGGACGATTTTGATCT GGATATGCTGGGAAGTGACGCCCTCGATGATTTTGACCTTGACATGCTTGGTTCGGA TGCCCTTGATGACTTTGACCTCGACATGCTCGGCAGTGACGCCCTTGATGATTTCGA CCTGGACATGCTGATTAACGGCGGGGGAGGCTCCGGTGGTGGGGGCAGCGGAGGGG GGGGCAGCGACTCCGTGGAAATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCAACGCCTCCCTG GGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAAAATTATCAAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGACAATGA GGAAAACGAGGACATTCTGGAAGATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGAGGACA GAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTGAAAACCTATGCCCACCTGTTCGACGACAAAGTG ATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGAGATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGC TGATCAACGGCATCCGGGACAAGCAGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGATTTCCTGAAG TCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAACTTCATGCAGCTGATCCACGACGACAGCCTGAC CTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAGAAAGCCCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCTGCACG AGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCAGCCCCGCCATTAAGAAGGGCATCCTGCAGACA GTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGTGAAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCCGAGAACAT CGTGATCGAAATGGCCAGAGAGAACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAGAAGAACAGC CGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGAAGAGGGCATCAAAGAGCTGGGCAGCCAGATCC TGAAAGAACACCCCGTGGAAAACACCCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAAGCTGTACCTGTAC TACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGGATATGTACGTGGACCAGGAACTGGACATCAACCGGCT GTCCGACTACGATGTGGACgcTATCGTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAAGGACGACTCCATC GACAACAAGGTGCTGACCAGAAGCGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAGAGCGACAACGTGC CCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGAAGATGAAGAACTACTGGCGGCAGCTGCTGAACGCC AAGCTGATTACCCAGAGAAAGTTCGACAATCTGACCAAGGCCGAGAGAGGCGGCCT GAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGCTTCATCAAGAGACAGCTGGTGGAAACCCGGCAGA TCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGATCCTGGACTCCCGGATGAACACTAAGTACGACGAG AATGACAAGCTGATCCGGGAAGTGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCAAGCTGGTGTC CGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGTTTTACAAAGTGCGCGAGATCAACAACTACCACCA CGCCCACGACGCCTACCTGAACGCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATCAAAAAGTACC CTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGACTACAAGGTGTACGACGTGCGGAAG ATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGGAAATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCCAAGTACTTCTTCTA CAGCAACATCATGAACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCAACGGCGAGATCC GGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAAACGGCGAAACCGGGGAGATCGTGTGGGATAA GGGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGTGCGGAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAAGTGAATATCG TGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCAGCAAAGAGTCTATCCTGCCCAAG AGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCCAGAAAGAAGGACTGGGACCCTAAGAAGTACG GCGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGTGGCCTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGCCAAAGTGGAAA AGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAAGAGCTGCTGGGGATCACCATCATG GAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAATCCCATCGACTTTCTGGAAGCCAAGGGCTACAA AGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCTAAGTACTCCCTGTTCGAGCTGG AAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGGCCTCTGCCGGCGAACTGCAGAAGGGAAACGA ACTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTGAACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGCCACTATGAGAA GCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAGAAACAGCTGTTTGTGGAACAGCACA AGCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCGAGCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAGAGAGTGATC CTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGCCTACAACAAGCACCGGGATAA GCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAATATCATCCACCTGTTTACCCTGACCAATCTGGG AGCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACCATCGACCGGAAGAGGTACACCA GCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGATCCACCAGAGCATCACCGGCCTGTAC GAGACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCGACagcgctGGAGGAGGTGGAAGCG GAGGAGGAGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGTAGCggacctaagaaaaagaggaaggtggcggccgctgctagc pSAMca059 dCas9(F575-vp64, 3XGS) - AA (SEQ ID NO: 208) DKKYSIGLAIGTNSVGWAVITDEYKVPSKKFKVLGNTDRHSIKKNLIGALLFD SGETAEATRLKRTARRRYTRRKNRICYLQEIFSNEMAKVDDSFFHRLEESFLVEEDKKHE RHPIFGNIVDEVAYHEKYPTIYHLRKKLVDSTDKADLRLIYLALAHMIKFRGHFLIEGDL NPDNSDVDKLFIQLVQTYNQLFEENPINASGVDAKAILSARLSKSRRLENLIAQLPGEKK NGLFGNLIALSLGLTPNFKSNFDLAEDAKLQLSKDTYDDDLDNLLAQIGDQYADLFLAA KNLSDAILLSDILRVNTEITKAPLSASMIKRYDEHHQDLTLLKALVRQQLPEKYKEIFFDQ SKNGYAGYIDGGASQEEFYKFIKPILEKMDGTEELLVKLNREDLLRKQRTFDNGSIPHQI HLGELHAILRRQEDFYPFLKDNREKIEKILTFRIPYYVGPLARGNSRFAWMTRKSEETITP WNFEEVVDKGASAQSFIERMTNFDKNLPNEKVLPKHSLLYEYFTVYNELTKVKYVTEG MRKPAFLSGEQKKAIVDLLFKTNRKVTVKQLKEDYFKKIECFGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSG RADALDDFDLDMLGSDALDDFDLDMLGSDALDDFDLDMLGSDALDDFDLDMLINGGG GSGGGGSGGGGSDSVEISGVEDRFNASLGTYHDLLKIIKDKDFLDNEENEDILEDIVLTLT LFEDREMIEERLKTYAHLFDDKVMKQLKRRRYTGWGRLSRKLINGIRDKQSGKTILDFL KSDGFANRNFMQLIHDDSLTFKEDIQKAQVSGQGDSLHEHIANLAGSPAIKKGILQTVKV VDELVKVMGRHKPENIVIEMARENQTTQKGQKNSRERMKRIEEGIKELGSQILKEHPVE NTQLQNEKLYLYYLQNGRDMYVDQELDINRLSDYDVDAIVPQSFLKDDSIDNKVLTRS DKNRGKSDNVPSEEVVKKMKNYWRQLLNAKLITQRKFDNLTKAERGGLSELDKAGFIK RQLVETRQITKHVAQILDSRMNTKYDENDKLIREVKVITLKSKLVSDFRKDFQFYKVREI NNYHHAHDAYLNAVVGTALIKKYPKLESEFVYGDYKVYDVRKMIAKSEQEIGKATAK YFFYSNIMNFFKTEITLANGEIRKRPLIETNGETGEIVWDKGRDFATVRKVLSMPQVNIV KKTEVQTGGFSKESILPKRNSDKLIARKKDWDPKKYGGFDSPTVAYSVLVVAKVEKGK SKKLKSVKELLGITIMERSSFEKNPIDFLEAKGYKEVKKDLIIKLPKYSLFELENGRKRML ASAGELQKGNELALPSKYVNFLYLASHYEKLKGSPEDNEQKQLFVEQHKHYLDEIIEQIS EFSKRVILADANLDKVLSAYNKHRDKPIREQAENIIHLFTLTNLGAPAAFKYFDTTIDRK RYTSTKEVLDATLIHQSITGLYETRIDLSQLGGD pSAMca060 dCas9(F575-P65, 1XGS) - DNA (SEQ ID NO: 209) GACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGCCATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGCTG GGCCGTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCA ACACCGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACAGC GGCGAAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACACCA GACGGAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAG GTGGACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGATAA GAAGCACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACG AGAAGTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAAG GCCGACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCAC TTCCTGATCGAGGGCGACCTGAACCCCGACAACAGCGACGTGGACAAGCTGTTCAT CCAGCTGGTGCAGACCTACAACCAGCTGTTCGAGGAAAACCCCATCAACGCCAGCG GCGTGGACGCCAAGGCCATCCTGTCTGCCAGACTGAGCAAGAGCAGACGGCTGGAA AATCTGATCGCCCAGCTGCCCGGCGAGAAGAAGAATGGCCTGTTCGGCAACCTGAT TGCCCTGAGCCTGGGCCTGACCCCCAACTTCAAGAGCAACTTCGACCTGGCCGAGG ATGCCAAACTGCAGCTGAGCAAGGACACCTACGACGACGACCTGGACAACCTGCTG GCCCAGATCGGCGACCAGTACGCCGACCTGTTTCTGGCCGCCAAGAACCTGTCCGAC GCCATCCTGCTGAGCGACATCCTGAGAGTGAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCCCT GAGCGCCTCTATGATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCTGA AAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAG AGCAAGAACGGCTACGCCGGCTACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTA CAAGTTCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGTGA AGCTGAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATC CCCCACCAGATCCACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATTT TTACCCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCA TCCCCTACTACGTGGGCCCTCTGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACC AGAAAGAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAAGG GCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGATGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCA ACGAGAAGGTGCTGCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTATAAC GAGCTGACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAATGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAG CGGCGAGCAGAAAAAGGCCATCGTGGACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGA CCGTGAAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCTTCGGAGGGGGA GGCAGCCCTTCAGGGCAGATCAGCAACCAGGCCCTGGCTCTGGCCCCTAGCTCCGCT CCAGTGCTGGCCCAGACTATGGTGCCCTCTAGTGCTATGGTGCCTCTGGCCCAGCCA CCTGCTCCAGCCCCTGTGCTGACCCCAGGACCACCCCAGTCACTGAGCGCTCCAGTG CCCAAGTCTACACAGGCCGGCGAGGGGACTCTGAGTGAAGCTCTGCTGCACCTGCA GTTCGACGCTGATGAGGACCTGGGAGCTCTGCTGGGGAACAGCACCGATCCCGGAG TGTTCACAGATCTGGCCTCCGTGGACAACTCTGAGTTTCAGCAGCTGCTGAATCAGG GCGTGTCCATGTCTCATAGTACAGCCGAACCAATGCTGATGGAGTACCCCGAAGCC ATTACCCGGCTGGTGACCGGCAGCCAGCGGCCCCCCGACCCCGCTCCAACTCCCCTG GGAACCAGCGGCCTGCCTAATGGGCTGTCCGGAGATGAAGACTTCTCAAGCATCGC TGATATGGACTTTAGTGCCCTGCTGTCACAGATTTCCTCTAGTGGGCAGGGAGGGGG GGGCAGCGACTCCGTGGAAATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCAACGCCTCCCTGG GCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAAAATTATCAAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGACAATGAG GAAAACGAGGACATTCTGGAAGATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGAGGACAG AGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTGAAAACCTATGCCCACCTGTTCGACGACAAAGTGA TGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGAGATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGCT GATCAACGGCATCCGGGACAAGCAGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGATTTCCTGAAGT CCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAACTTCATGCAGCTGATCCACGACGACAGCCTGACC TTTAAAGAGGACATCCAGAAAGCCCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCTGCACGA GCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCAGCCCCGCCATTAAGAAGGGCATCCTGCAGACAG TGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGTGAAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCCGAGAACATC GTGATCGAAATGGCCAGAGAGAACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAGAAGAACAGCC GCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGAAGAGGGCATCAAAGAGCTGGGCAGCCAGATCCT GAAAGAACACCCCGTGGAAAACACCCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAAGCTGTACCTGTACT ACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGGATATGTACGTGGACCAGGAACTGGACATCAACCGGCTG TCCGACTACGATGTGGACgcTATCGTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAAGGACGACTCCATCG ACAACAAGGTGCTGACCAGAAGCGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAGAGCGACAACGTGCC CTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGAAGATGAAGAACTACTGGCGGCAGCTGCTGAACGCCA AGCTGATTACCCAGAGAAAGTTCGACAATCTGACCAAGGCCGAGAGAGGCGGCCTG AGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGCTTCATCAAGAGACAGCTGGTGGAAACCCGGCAGAT CACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGATCCTGGACTCCCGGATGAACACTAAGTACGACGAGA ATGACAAGCTGATCCGGGAAGTGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCAAGCTGGTGTCC GATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGTTTTACAAAGTGCGCGAGATCAACAACTACCACCAC GCCCACGACGCCTACCTGAACGCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATCAAAAAGTACCC TAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGACTACAAGGTGTACGACGTGCGGAAGA TGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGGAAATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCCAAGTACTTCTTCTAC AGCAACATCATGAACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCAACGGCGAGATCCG GAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAAACGGCGAAACCGGGGAGATCGTGTGGGATAAG GGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGTGCGGAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAAGTGAATATCGT GAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCAGCAAAGAGTCTATCCTGCCCAAGA GGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCCAGAAAGAAGGACTGGGACCCTAAGAAGTACGG CGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGTGGCCTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGCCAAAGTGGAAAA GGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAAGAGCTGCTGGGGATCACCATCATGG AAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAATCCCATCGACTTTCTGGAAGCCAAGGGCTACAAA GAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCTAAGTACTCCCTGTTCGAGCTGGA AAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGGCCTCTGCCGGCGAACTGCAGAAGGGAAACGAA CTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTGAACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGCCACTATGAGAAG CTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAGAAACAGCTGTTTGTGGAACAGCACAA GCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCGAGCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAGAGAGTGATCC TGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGCCTACAACAAGCACCGGGATAAG CCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAATATCATCCACCTGTTTACCCTGACCAATCTGGGA GCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACCATCGACCGGAAGAGGTACACCAGC ACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGATCCACCAGAGCATCACCGGCCTGTACGA GACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCGACagcgctGGAGGAGGTGGAAGCGGA GGAGGAGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGTAGCggacctaagaaaaagaggaaggtggcggcc pSAMca060 dCas9(F575-P65, 1XGS) - AA (SEQ ID NO: 210) DKKYSIGLAIGTNSVGWAVITDEYKVPSKKFKVLGNTDRHSIKKNLIGALLFD SGETAEATRLKRTARRRYTRRKNRICYLQEIFSNEMAKVDDSFFHRLEESFLVEEDKKHE RHPIFGNIVDEVAYHEKYPTIYHLRKKLVDSTDKADLRLIYLALAHMIKFRGHFLIEGDL NPDNSDVDKLFIQLVQTYNQLFEENPINASGVDAKAILSARLSKSRRLENLIAQLPGEKK NGLFGNLIALSLGLTPNFKSNFDLAEDAKLQLSKDTYDDDLDNLLAQIGDQYADLFLAA KNLSDAILLSDILRVNTEITKAPLSASMIKRYDEHHQDLTLLKALVRQQLPEKYKEIFFDQ SKNGYAGYIDGGASQEEFYKFIKPILEKMDGTEELLVKLNREDLLRKQRTFDNGSIPHQI HLGELHAILRRQEDFYPFLKDNREKIEKILTFRIPYYVGPLARGNSRFAWMTRKSEETITP WNFEEVVDKGASAQSFIERMTNFDKNLPNEKVLPKHSLLYEYFTVYNELTKVKYVTEG MRKPAFLSGEQKKAIVDLLFKTNRKVTVKQLKEDYFKKIECFGGGGSPSGQISNQALAL APSSAPVLAQTMVPSSAMVPLAQPPAPAPVLTPGPPQSLSAPVPKSTQAGEGTLSEALLH LQFDADEDLGALLGNSTDPGVFTDLASVDNSEFQQLLNQGVSMSHSTAEPMLMEYPEAI TRLVTGSQRPPDPAPTPLGTSGLPNGLSGDEDFSSIADMDFSALLSQISSSGQGGGGSDSV EISGVEDRFNASLGTYHDLLKIIKDKDFLDNEENEDILEDIVLTLTLFEDREMIEERLKTY AHLFDDKVMKQLKRRRYTGWGRLSRKLINGIRDKQSGKTILDFLKSDGFANRNFMQLI HDDSLTFKEDIQKAQVSGQGDSLHEHIANLAGSPAIKKGILQTVKVVDELVKVMGRHKP ENIVIEMARENQTTQKGQKNSRERMKRIEEGIKELGSQILKEHPVENTQLQNEKLYLYYL QNGRDMYVDQELDINRLSDYDVDAIVPQSFLKDDSIDNKVLTRSDKNRGKSDNVPSEE VVKKMKNYWRQLLNAKLITQRKFDNLTKAERGGLSELDKAGFIKRQLVETRQITKHVA QILDSRMNTKYDENDKLIREVKVITLKSKLVSDFRKDFQFYKVREINNYHHAHDAYLNA VVGTALIKKYPKLESEFVYGDYKVYDVRKMIAKSEQEIGKATAKYFFYSNIMNFFKTEIT LANGEIRKRPLIETNGETGEIVWDKGRDFATVRKVLSMPQVNIVKKTEVQTGGFSKESIL PKRNSDKLIARKKDWDPKKYGGFDSPTVAYSVLVVAKVEKGKSKKLKSVKELLGITIM ERSSFEKNPIDFLEAKGYKEVKKDLIIKLPKYSLFELENGRKRMLASAGELQKGNELALP SKYVNFLYLASHYEKLKGSPEDNEQKQLFVEQHKHYLDEIIEQISEFSKRVILADANLDK VLSAYNKHRDKPIREQAENIIHLFTLTNLGAPAAFKYFDTTIDRKRYTSTKEVLDATLIHQ SITGLYETRIDLSQLGGDSAGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSGPKKKRKVAA pSAMca061 dCas9(F575-P65, 3XGS) - DNA (SEQ ID NO: 211) accatgGACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGCCATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGG GCTGGGCCGTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTG GGCAACACCGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGA CAGCGGCGAAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATAC ACCAGACGGAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGC CAAGGTGGACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGG ATAAGAAGCACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTAC CACGAGAAGTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGA CAAGGCCGACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGG CCACTTCCTGATCGAGGGCGACCTGAACCCCGACAACAGCGACGTGGACAAGCTGT TCATCCAGCTGGTGCAGACCTACAACCAGCTGTTCGAGGAAAACCCCATCAACGCC AGCGGCGTGGACGCCAAGGCCATCCTGTCTGCCAGACTGAGCAAGAGCAGACGGCT GGAAAATCTGATCGCCCAGCTGCCCGGCGAGAAGAAGAATGGCCTGTTCGGCAACC TGATTGCCCTGAGCCTGGGCCTGACCCCCAACTTCAAGAGCAACTTCGACCTGGCCG AGGATGCCAAACTGCAGCTGAGCAAGGACACCTACGACGACGACCTGGACAACCTG CTGGCCCAGATCGGCGACCAGTACGCCGACCTGTTTCTGGCCGCCAAGAACCTGTCC GACGCCATCCTGCTGAGCGACATCCTGAGAGTGAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCC CCTGAGCGCCTCTATGATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGC TGAAAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACC AGAGCAAGAACGGCTACGCCGGCTACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTC TACAAGTTCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGT GAAGCTGAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGC ATCCCCCACCAGATCCACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGA TTTTTACCCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCG CATCCCCTACTACGTGGGCCCTCTGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGA CCAGAAAGAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAA GGGCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGATGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGC CCAACGAGAAGGTGCTGCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTAT AACGAGCTGACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAATGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCT GAGCGGCGAGCAGAAAAAGGCCATCGTGGACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAA GTGACCGTGAAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCTTCGGCGG GGGAGGCTCCGGTGGTGGGGGCAGCGGAGGGGGGGGCAGCCCTTCAGGGCAGATC AGCAACCAGGCCCTGGCTCTGGCCCCTAGCTCCGCTCCAGTGCTGGCCCAGACTATG GTGCCCTCTAGTGCTATGGTGCCTCTGGCCCAGCCACCTGCTCCAGCCCCTGTGCTG ACCCCAGGACCACCCCAGTCACTGAGCGCTCCAGTGCCCAAGTCTACACAGGCCGG CGAGGGGACTCTGAGTGAAGCTCTGCTGCACCTGCAGTTCGACGCTGATGAGGACCT GGGAGCTCTGCTGGGGAACAGCACCGATCCCGGAGTGTTCACAGATCTGGCCTCCG TGGACAACTCTGAGTTTCAGCAGCTGCTGAATCAGGGCGTGTCCATGTCTCATAGTA CAGCCGAACCAATGCTGATGGAGTACCCCGAAGCCATTACCCGGCTGGTGACCGGC AGCCAGCGGCCCCCCGACCCCGCTCCAACTCCCCTGGGAACCAGCGGCCTGCCTAAT GGGCTGTCCGGAGATGAAGACTTCTCAAGCATCGCTGATATGGACTTTAGTGCCCTG CTGTCACAGATTTCCTCTAGTGGGCAGGGGGGGGAGGCTCCGGTGGTGGGGGCAG CGGAGGGGGGGGCAGCGACTCCGTGGAAATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCAACG CCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAAAATTATCAAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGG ACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGACATTCTGGAAGATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTT GAGGACAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAACGGCTGAAAACCTATGCCCACCTGTTCGACGA CAAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGGCGGAGATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGC CGGAAGCTGATCAACGGCATCCGGGACAAGCAGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGATTT CCTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAACTTCATGCAGCTGATCCACGACGACA GCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAGAAAGCCCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAGC CTGCACGAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCAGCCCCGCCATTAAGAAGGGCATCCT GCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGTGAAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCCG AGAACATCGTGATCGAAATGGCCAGAGAGAACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAGAA GAACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGATCGAAGAGGGCATCAAAGAGCTGGGCAGC CAGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGTGGAAAACACCCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAAGCTGTA CCTGTACTACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGGATATGTACGTGGACCAGGAACTGGACATCA ACCGGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACgcTATCGTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAAGGACG ACTCCATCGACAACAAGGTGCTGACCAGAAGCGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAGAGCGA CAACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGAAGATGAAGAACTACTGGCGGCAGCTGC TGAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGAGAAAGTTCGACAATCTGACCAAGGCCGAGAGA GGCGGCCTGAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGCTTCATCAAGAGACAGCTGGTGGAAAC CCGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGATCCTGGACTCCCGGATGAACACTAAGT ACGACGAGAATGACAAGCTGATCCGGGAAGTGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCAAG CTGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCCAGTTTTACAAAGTGCGCGAGATCAACAAC TACCACCACGCCCACGACGCCTACCTGAACGCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATCAA AAAGTACCCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGACTACAAGGTGTACGACG TGCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGGAAATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCCAAGTA CTTCTTCTACAGCAACATCATGAACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCAACGG CGAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAAACGGCGAAACCGGGGAGATCGTGT GGGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGTGCGGAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAAGTG AATATCGTGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCAGCAAAGAGTCTATCCT GCCCAAGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATCGCCAGAAAGAAGGACTGGGACCCTAAG AAGTACGGCGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGTGGCCTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGCCAAA GTGGAAAAGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAAGAGCTGCTGGGGATCA CCATCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAATCCCATCGACTTTCTGGAAGCCAAG GGCTACAAAGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCTAAGTACTCCCTGTT CGAGCTGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGGCCTCTGCCGGCGAACTGCAGAAG GGAAACGAACTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTGAACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGCCAC TATGAGAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAGAAACAGCTGTTTGTGGA ACAGCACAAGCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCGAGCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAGA GAGTGATCCTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGCCTACAACAAGCAC CGGGATAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAATATCATCCACCTGTTTACCCTGAC CAATCTGGGAGCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACCATCGACCGGAAGAG GTACACCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGATCCACCAGAGCATCACCG GCCTGTACGAGACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCGACagcgctGGAGGAGG TGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGTAGCggacctaagaaaaagaggaaggtggcg gccgct pSAMca061 dCas9(F575-P65, 3XGS) - AA (SEQ ID NO: 212) TMDKKYSIGLAIGTNSVGWAVITDEYKVPSKKFKVLGNTDRHSIKKNLIGAL LFDSGETAEATRLKRTARRRYTRRKNRICYLQEIFSNEMAKVDDSFFHRLEESFLVEEDK KHERHPIFGNIVDEVAYHEKYPTIYHLRKKLVDSTDKADLRLIYLALAHMIKFRGHFLIE GDLNPDNSDVDKLFIQLVQTYNQLFEENPINASGVDAKAILSARLSKSRRLENLIAQLPG EKKNGLFGNLIALSLGLTPNFKSNFDLAEDAKLQLSKDTYDDDLDNLLAQIGDQYADLF LAAKNLSDAILLSDILRVNTEITKAPLSASMIKRYDEHHQDLTLLKALVRQQLPEKYKEIF FDQSKNGYAGYIDGGASQEEFYKFIKPILEKMDGTEELLVKLNREDLLRKQRTFDNGSIP HQIHLGELHAILRRQEDFYPFLKDNREKIEKILTFRIPYYVGPLARGNSRFAWMTRKSEET ITPWNFEEVVDKGASAQSFIERMTNFDKNLPNEKVLPKHSLLYEYFTVYNELTKVKYVT EGMRKPAFLSGEQKKAIVDLLFKTNRKVTVKQLKEDYFKKIECFGGGGSGGGGSGGGG SPSGQISNQALALAPSSAPVLAQTMVPSSAMVPLAQPPAPAPVLTPGPPQSLSAPVPKST QAGEGTLSEALLHLQFDADEDLGALLGNSTDPGVFTDLASVDNSEFQQLLNQGVSMSH STAEPMLMEYPEAITRLVTGSQRPPDPAPTPLGTSGLPNGLSGDEDFSSIADMDFSALLSQ ISSSGQGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSDSVEISGVEDRFNASLGTYHDLLKIIKDKDFLDNEENED ILEDIVLTLTLFEDREMIEERLKTYAHLFDDKVMKQLKRRRYTGWGRLSRKLINGIRDKQ SGKTILDFLKSDGFANRNFMQLIHDDSLTFKEDIQKAQVSGQGDSLHEHIANLAGSPAIK KGILQTVKVVDELVKVMGRHKPENIVIEMARENQTTQKGQKNSRERMKRIEEGIKELGS QILKEHPVENTQLQNEKLYLYYLQNGRDMYVDQELDINRLSDYDVDAIVPQSFLKDDSI DNKVLTRSDKNRGKSDNVPSEEVVKKMKNYWRQLLNAKLITQRKFDNLTKAERGGLS ELDKAGFIKRQLVETRQITKHVAQILDSRMNTKYDENDKLIREVKVITLKSKLVSDFRKD FQFYKVREINNYHHAHDAYLNAVVGTALIKKYPKLESEFVYGDYKVYDVRKMIAKSEQ EIGKATAKYFFYSNIMNFFKTEITLANGEIRKRPLIETNGETGEIVWDKGRDFATVRKVLS MPQVNIVKKTEVQTGGFSKESILPKRNSDKLIARKKDWDPKKYGGFDSPTVAYSVLVV AKVEKGKSKKLKSVKELLGITIMERSSFEKNPIDFLEAKGYKEVKKDLIIKLPKYSLFELE NGRKRMLASAGELQKGNELALPSKYVNFLYLASHYEKLKGSPEDNEQKQLFVEQHKH YLDEIIEQISEFSKRVILADANLDKVLSAYNKHRDKPIREQAENIIHLFTLTNLGAPAAFKY FDTTIDRKRYTSTKEVLDATLIHQSITGLYETRIDLSQLGGDSAGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSG PKKKRKVAAA pSAMca062 dCas9(K1153-vp64, 1XGS) - DNA (SEQ ID NO: 213) GACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGCCATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGCTG GGCCGTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCA ACACCGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACAGC GGCGAAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACACCA GACGGAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAG GTGGACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGATAA GAAGCACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACG AGAAGTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAAG GCCGACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCAC TTCCTGATCGAGGGCGACCTGAACCCCGACAACAGCGACGTGGACAAGCTGTTCAT CCAGCTGGTGCAGACCTACAACCAGCTGTTCGAGGAAAACCCCATCAACGCCAGCG GCGTGGACGCCAAGGCCATCCTGTCTGCCAGACTGAGCAAGAGCAGACGGCTGGAA AATCTGATCGCCCAGCTGCCCGGCGAGAAGAAGAATGGCCTGTTCGGCAACCTGAT TGCCCTGAGCCTGGGCCTGACCCCCAACTTCAAGAGCAACTTCGACCTGGCCGAGG ATGCCAAACTGCAGCTGAGCAAGGACACCTACGACGACGACCTGGACAACCTGCTG GCCCAGATCGGCGACCAGTACGCCGACCTGTTTCTGGCCGCCAAGAACCTGTCCGAC GCCATCCTGCTGAGCGACATCCTGAGAGTGAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCCCT GAGCGCCTCTATGATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCTGA AAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAG AGCAAGAACGGCTACGCCGGCTACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTA CAAGTTCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGTGA AGCTGAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATC CCCCACCAGATCCACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATTT TTACCCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCA TCCCCTACTACGTGGGCCCTCTGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACC AGAAAGAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAAGG GCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGATGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCA ACGAGAAGGTGCTGCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTATAAC GAGCTGACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAATGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAG CGGCGAGCAGAAAAAGGCCATCGTGGACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGA CCGTGAAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCTTCGACTCCGTG GAAATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCAACGCCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTG CTGAAAATTATCAAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGACATTCT GGAAGATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGAGGACAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAAC GGCTGAAAACCTATGCCCACCTGTTCGACGACAAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGG CGGAGATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGCTGATCAACGGCATCCGGGA CAAGCAGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGATTTCCTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACA GAAACTTCATGCAGCTGATCCACGACGACAGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAG AAAGCCCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCTGCACGAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGC CGGCAGCCCCGCCATTAAGAAGGGCATCCTGCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGC TCGTGAAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCCGAGAACATCGTGATCGAAATGGCCAGA GAGAACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAGAAGAACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGA TCGAAGAGGGCATCAAAGAGCTGGGCAGCCAGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGTGGA AAACACCCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAAGCTGTACCTGTACTACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGG ATATGTACGTGGACCAGGAACTGGACATCAACCGGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACg cTATCGTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAAGGACGACTCCATCGACAACAAGGTGCTGACCA GAAGCGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAGAGCGACAACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAA GAAGATGAAGAACTACTGGCGGCAGCTGCTGAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGAGAA AGTTCGACAATCTGACCAAGGCCGAGAGAGGCGGCCTGAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCC GGCTTCATCAAGAGACAGCTGGTGGAAACCCGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACA GATCCTGGACTCCCGGATGAACACTAAGTACGACGAGAATGACAAGCTGATCCGGG AAGTGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCAAGCTGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCC AGTTTTACAAAGTGCGCGAGATCAACAACTACCACCACGCCCACGACGCCTACCTG AACGCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATCAAAAAGTACCCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTT CGTGTACGGCGACTACAAGGTGTACGACGTGCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGC AGGAAATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCCAAGTACTTCTTCTACAGCAACATCATGAACTTTT TCAAGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCAACGGCGAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAG ACAAACGGCGAAACCGGGGAGATCGTGTGGGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGT GCGGAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAAGTGAATATCGTGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGA CAGGCGGCTTCAGCAAAGAGTCTATCCTGCCCAAGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATC GCCAGAAAGAAGGACTGGGACCCTAAGAAGTACGGCGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGT GGCCTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGCCAAAGTGGAAAAGGGCAAGGGAGGGGGAGGCA GCGGACGGGCTGACGCATTGGACGATTTTGATCTGGATATGCTGGGAAGTGACGCC CTCGATGATTTTGACCTTGACATGCTTGGTTCGGATGCCCTTGATGACTTTGACCTCG ACATGCTCGGCAGTGACGCCCTTGATGATTTCGACCTGGACATGCTGATTAACGGCG GGGGAGGCTCCTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAAGAGCTGCTGGGGATCACCATC ATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAATCCCATCGACTTTCTGGAAGCCAAGGGCTA CAAAGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCTAAGTACTCCCTGTTCGAGC TGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGGCCTCTGCCGGCGAACTGCAGAAGGGAAA CGAACTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTGAACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGCCACTATGA GAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAGAAACAGCTGTTTGTGGAACAGC ACAAGCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCGAGCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAGAGAGTG ATCCTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGCCTACAACAAGCACCGGGA TAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAATATCATCCACCTGTTTACCCTGACCAATCT GGGAGCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACCATCGACCGGAAGAGGTACA CCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGATCCACCAGAGCATCACCGGCCTG TACGAGACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCGACagcgctGGAGGAGGTGGAA GCGGAGGAGGAGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGTAGCggacctaagaaaaagaggaaggtggcggccgct pSAMca062 dCas9(K1153-vp64, 1XGS) - AA (SEQ ID NO: 214) DKKYSIGLAIGTNSVGWAVITDEYKVPSKKFKVLGNTDRHSIKKNLIGALLFD SGETAEATRLKRTARRRYTRRKNRICYLQEIFSNEMAKVDDSFFHRLEESFLVEEDKKHE RHPIFGNIVDEVAYHEKYPTIYHLRKKLVDSTDKADLRLIYLALAHMIKFRGHFLIEGDL NPDNSDVDKLFIQLVQTYNQLFEENPINASGVDAKAILSARLSKSRRLENLIAQLPGEKK NGLFGNLIALSLGLTPNFKSNFDLAEDAKLQLSKDTYDDDLDNLLAQIGDQYADLFLAA KNLSDAILLSDILRVNTEITKAPLSASMIKRYDEHHQDLTLLKALVRQQLPEKYKEIFFDQ SKNGYAGYIDGGASQEEFYKFIKPILEKMDGTEELLVKLNREDLLRKQRTFDNGSIPHQI HLGELHAILRRQEDFYPFLKDNREKIEKILTFRIPYYVGPLARGNSRFAWMTRKSEETITP WNFEEVVDKGASAQSFIERMTNFDKNLPNEKVLPKHSLLYEYFTVYNELTKVKYVTEG MRKPAFLSGEQKKAIVDLLFKTNRKVTVKQLKEDYFKKIECFDSVEISGVEDRFNASLG TYHDLLKIIKDKDFLDNEENEDILEDIVLTLTLFEDREMIEERLKTYAHLFDDKVMKQLK RRRYTGWGRLSRKLINGIRDKQSGKTILDFLKSDGFANRNFMQLIHDDSLTFKEDIQKAQ VSGQGDSLHEHIANLAGSPAIKKGILQTVKVVDELVKVMGRHKPENIVIEMARENQTTQ KGQKNSRERMKRIEEGIKELGSQILKEHPVENTQLQNEKLYLYYLQNGRDMYVDQELDI NRLSDYDVDAIVPQSFLKDDSIDNKVLTRSDKNRGKSDNVPSEEVVKKMKNYWRQLLN AKLITQRKFDNLTKAERGGLSELDKAGFIKRQLVETRQITKHVAQILDSRMNTKYDEND KLIREVKVITLKSKLVSDFRKDFQFYKVREINNYHHAHDAYLNAVVGTALIKKYPKLES EFVYGDYKVYDVRKMIAKSEQEIGKATAKYFFYSNIMNFFKTEITLANGEIRKRPLIETN GETGEIVWDKGRDFATVRKVLSMPQVNIVKKTEVQTGGFSKESILPKRNSDKLIARKKD WDPKKYGGFDSPTVAYSVLVVAKVEKGKGGGGSGRADALDDFDLDMLGSDALDDFD LDMLGSDALDDFDLDMLGSDALDDFDLDMLINGGGGSSKKLKSVKELLGITIMERSSFE KNPIDFLEAKGYKEVKKDLIIKLPKYSLFELENGRKRMLASAGELQKGNELALPSKYVN FLYLASHYEKLKGSPEDNEQKQLFVEQHKHYLDEIIEQISEFSKRVILADANLDKVLSAY NKHRDKPIREQAENIIHLFTLTNLGAPAAFKYFDTTIDRKRYTSTKEVLDATLIHQSITGL YETRIDLSQLGGDSAGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSGPKKKRKVAAA pSAMca063 dCas9(K1153-vp64, 3XGS) - DNA (SEQ ID NO: 215) GACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGCCATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGCTG GGCCGTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCA ACACCGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACAGC GGCGAAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACACCA GACGGAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAG GTGGACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGATAA GAAGCACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACG AGAAGTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAAG GCCGACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCAC TTCCTGATCGAGGGCGACCTGAACCCCGACAACAGCGACGTGGACAAGCTGTTCAT CCAGCTGGTGCAGACCTACAACCAGCTGTTCGAGGAAAACCCCATCAACGCCAGCG GCGTGGACGCCAAGGCCATCCTGTCTGCCAGACTGAGCAAGAGCAGACGGCTGGAA AATCTGATCGCCCAGCTGCCCGGCGAGAAGAAGAATGGCCTGTTCGGCAACCTGAT TGCCCTGAGCCTGGGCCTGACCCCCAACTTCAAGAGCAACTTCGACCTGGCCGAGG ATGCCAAACTGCAGCTGAGCAAGGACACCTACGACGACGACCTGGACAACCTGCTG GCCCAGATCGGCGACCAGTACGCCGACCTGTTTCTGGCCGCCAAGAACCTGTCCGAC GCCATCCTGCTGAGCGACATCCTGAGAGTGAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCCCT GAGCGCCTCTATGATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCTGA AAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAG AGCAAGAACGGCTACGCCGGCTACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTA CAAGTTCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGTGA AGCTGAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATC CCCCACCAGATCCACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATTT TTACCCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCA TCCCCTACTACGTGGGCCCTCTGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACC AGAAAGAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAAGG GCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGATGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCA ACGAGAAGGTGCTGCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTATAAC GAGCTGACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAATGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAG CGGCGAGCAGAAAAAGGCCATCGTGGACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGA CCGTGAAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCTTCGACTCCGTG GAAATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCAACGCCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTG CTGAAAATTATCAAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGACATTCT GGAAGATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGAGGACAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAAC GGCTGAAAACCTATGCCCACCTGTTCGACGACAAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGG CGGAGATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGCTGATCAACGGCATCCGGGA CAAGCAGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGATTTCCTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACA GAAACTTCATGCAGCTGATCCACGACGACAGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAG AAAGCCCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCTGCACGAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGC CGGCAGCCCCGCCATTAAGAAGGGCATCCTGCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGC TCGTGAAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCCGAGAACATCGTGATCGAAATGGCCAGA GAGAACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAGAAGAACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGA TCGAAGAGGGCATCAAAGAGCTGGGCAGCCAGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGTGGA AAACACCCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAAGCTGTACCTGTACTACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGG ATATGTACGTGGACCAGGAACTGGACATCAACCGGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACg cTATCGTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAAGGACGACTCCATCGACAACAAGGTGCTGACCA GAAGCGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAGAGCGACAACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAA GAAGATGAAGAACTACTGGCGGCAGCTGCTGAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGAGAA AGTTCGACAATCTGACCAAGGCCGAGAGAGGCGGCCTGAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCC GGCTTCATCAAGAGACAGCTGGTGGAAACCCGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACA GATCCTGGACTCCCGGATGAACACTAAGTACGACGAGAATGACAAGCTGATCCGGG AAGTGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCAAGCTGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCC AGTTTTACAAAGTGCGCGAGATCAACAACTACCACCACGCCCACGACGCCTACCTG AACGCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATCAAAAAGTACCCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTT CGTGTACGGCGACTACAAGGTGTACGACGTGCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGC AGGAAATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCCAAGTACTTCTTCTACAGCAACATCATGAACTTTT TCAAGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCAACGGCGAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAG ACAAACGGCGAAACCGGGGAGATCGTGTGGGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGT GCGGAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAAGTGAATATCGTGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGA CAGGCGGCTTCAGCAAAGAGTCTATCCTGCCCAAGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATC GCCAGAAAGAAGGACTGGGACCCTAAGAAGTACGGCGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGT GGCCTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGCCAAAGTGGAAAAGGGCAAGGGCGGGGGAGGCT CCGGTGGTGGGGGCAGCGGAGGGGGGGGCAGCGGACGGGCTGACGCATTGGACGA TTTTGATCTGGATATGCTGGGAAGTGACGCCCTCGATGATTTTGACCTTGACATGCTT GGTTCGGATGCCCTTGATGACTTTGACCTCGACATGCTCGGCAGTGACGCCCTTGAT GATTTCGACCTGGACATGCTGATTAACGGCGGGGGAGGCTCCGGTGGTGGGGGCAG CGGAGGGGGGGGCAGCTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAAGAGCTGCTGGGGATC ACCATCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAATCCCATCGACTTTCTGGAAGCCAA GGGCTACAAAGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCTAAGTACTCCCTGT TCGAGCTGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGGCCTCTGCCGGCGAACTGCAGAAG GGAAACGAACTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTGAACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGCCAC TATGAGAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAGAAACAGCTGTTTGTGGA ACAGCACAAGCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCGAGCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAGA GAGTGATCCTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGCCTACAACAAGCAC CGGGATAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAATATCATCCACCTGTTTACCCTGAC CAATCTGGGAGCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACCATCGACCGGAAGAG GTACACCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGATCCACCAGAGCATCACCG GCCTGTACGAGACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCGACagcgctGGAGGAGG TGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGTAGCggacctaagaaaaagaggaaggtggcg gccgctgctag pSAMca063 dCas9(K1153-vp64, 3XGS) - AA (SEQ ID NO: 216) DKKYSIGLAIGTNSVGWAVITDEYKVPSKKFKVLGNTDRHSIKKNLIGALLFD SGETAEATRLKRTARRRYTRRKNRICYLQEIFSNEMAKVDDSFFHRLEESFLVEEDKKHE RHPIFGNIVDEVAYHEKYPTIYHLRKKLVDSTDKADLRLIYLALAHMIKFRGHFLIEGDL NPDNSDVDKLFIQLVQTYNQLFEENPINASGVDAKAILSARLSKSRRLENLIAQLPGEKK NGLFGNLIALSLGLTPNFKSNFDLAEDAKLQLSKDTYDDDLDNLLAQIGDQYADLFLAA KNLSDAILLSDILRVNTEITKAPLSASMIKRYDEHHQDLTLLKALVRQQLPEKYKEIFFDQ SKNGYAGYIDGGASQEEFYKFIKPILEKMDGTEELLVKLNREDLLRKQRTFDNGSIPHQI HLGELHAILRRQEDFYPFLKDNREKIEKILTFRIPYYVGPLARGNSRFAWMTRKSEETITP WNFEEVVDKGASAQSFIERMTNFDKNLPNEKVLPKHSLLYEYFTVYNELTKVKYVTEG MRKPAFLSGEQKKAIVDLLFKTNRKVTVKQLKEDYFKKIECFDSVEISGVEDRFNASLG TYHDLLKIIKDKDFLDNEENEDILEDIVLTLTLFEDREMIEERLKTYAHLFDDKVMKQLK RRRYTGWGRLSRKLINGIRDKQSGKTILDFLKSDGFANRNFMQLIHDDSLTFKEDIQKAQ VSGQGDSLHEHIANLAGSPAIKKGILQTVKVVDELVKVMGRHKPENIVIEMARENQTTQ KGQKNSRERMKRIEEGIKELGSQILKEHPVENTQLQNEKLYLYYLQNGRDMYVDQELDI NRLSDYDVDAIVPQSFLKDDSIDNKVLTRSDKNRGKSDNVPSEEVVKKMKNYWRQLLN AKLITQRKFDNLTKAERGGLSELDKAGFIKRQLVETRQITKHVAQILDSRMNTKYDEND KLIREVKVITLKSKLVSDFRKDFQFYKVREINNYHHAHDAYLNAVVGTALIKKYPKLES EFVYGDYKVYDVRKMIAKSEQEIGKATAKYFFYSNIMNFFKTEITLANGEIRKRPLIETN GETGEIVWDKGRDFATVRKVLSMPQVNIVKKTEVQTGGFSKESILPKRNSDKLIARKKD WDPKKYGGFDSPTVAYSVLVVAKVEKGKGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSGRADALDDFDLDM LGSDALDDFDLDMLGSDALDDFDLDMLGSDALDDFDLDMLINGGGGSGGGGSGGGGS SKKLKSVKELLGITIMERSSFEKNPIDFLEAKGYKEVKKDLIIKLPKYSLFELENGRKRML ASAGELQKGNELALPSKYVNFLYLASHYEKLKGSPEDNEQKQLFVEQHKHYLDEIIEQIS EFSKRVILADANLDKVLSAYNKHRDKPIREQAENIIHLFTLTNLGAPAAFKYFDTTIDRK RYTSTKEVLDATLIHQSITGLYETRIDLSQLGGDSAGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSGPKKKRKV AAAA pSAMca064 dCas9(K1153-P65, 1XGS) - DNA (SEQ ID NO: 217) GACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGCCATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGCTG GGCCGTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGGCA ACACCGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACAGC GGCGAAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACACCA GACGGAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAG GTGGACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGATAA GAAGCACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACG AGAAGTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAAG GCCGACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCAC TTCCTGATCGAGGGCGACCTGAACCCCGACAACAGCGACGTGGACAAGCTGTTCAT CCAGCTGGTGCAGACCTACAACCAGCTGTTCGAGGAAAACCCCATCAACGCCAGCG GCGTGGACGCCAAGGCCATCCTGTCTGCCAGACTGAGCAAGAGCAGACGGCTGGAA AATCTGATCGCCCAGCTGCCCGGCGAGAAGAAGAATGGCCTGTTCGGCAACCTGAT TGCCCTGAGCCTGGGCCTGACCCCCAACTTCAAGAGCAACTTCGACCTGGCCGAGG ATGCCAAACTGCAGCTGAGCAAGGACACCTACGACGACGACCTGGACAACCTGCTG GCCCAGATCGGCGACCAGTACGCCGACCTGTTTCTGGCCGCCAAGAACCTGTCCGAC GCCATCCTGCTGAGCGACATCCTGAGAGTGAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCCCT GAGCGCCTCTATGATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCTGA AAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACCAG AGCAAGAACGGCTACGCCGGCTACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTA CAAGTTCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGTGA AGCTGAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATC CCCCACCAGATCCACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATTT TTACCCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCA TCCCCTACTACGTGGGCCCTCTGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACC AGAAAGAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAAGG GCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGATGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGCCCA ACGAGAAGGTGCTGCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTATAAC GAGCTGACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAATGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAG CGGCGAGCAGAAAAAGGCCATCGTGGACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGA CCGTGAAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCTTCGACTCCGTG GAAATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCAACGCCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTG CTGAAAATTATCAAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGACATTCT GGAAGATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGAGGACAGAGAGATGATCGAGGAAC GGCTGAAAACCTATGCCCACCTGTTCGACGACAAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGAAGCGG CGGAGATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGCTGATCAACGGCATCCGGGA CAAGCAGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGATTTCCTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACA GAAACTTCATGCAGCTGATCCACGACGACAGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAG AAAGCCCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCTGCACGAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGC CGGCAGCCCCGCCATTAAGAAGGGCATCCTGCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGC TCGTGAAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCCGAGAACATCGTGATCGAAATGGCCAGA GAGAACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAGAAGAACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGA TCGAAGAGGGCATCAAAGAGCTGGGCAGCCAGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCCGTGGA AAACACCCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAAGCTGTACCTGTACTACCTGCAGAATGGGCGGG ATATGTACGTGGACCAGGAACTGGACATCAACCGGCTGTCCGACTACGATGTGGACg cTATCGTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAAGGACGACTCCATCGACAACAAGGTGCTGACCA GAAGCGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAGAGCGACAACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAA GAAGATGAAGAACTACTGGCGGCAGCTGCTGAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGAGAA AGTTCGACAATCTGACCAAGGCCGAGAGAGGCGGCCTGAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCC GGCTTCATCAAGAGACAGCTGGTGGAAACCCGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACA GATCCTGGACTCCCGGATGAACACTAAGTACGACGAGAATGACAAGCTGATCCGGG AAGTGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCAAGCTGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAGGATTTCC AGTTTTACAAAGTGCGCGAGATCAACAACTACCACCACGCCCACGACGCCTACCTG AACGCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATCAAAAAGTACCCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTT CGTGTACGGCGACTACAAGGTGTACGACGTGCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGC AGGAAATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCCAAGTACTTCTTCTACAGCAACATCATGAACTTTT TCAAGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCAACGGCGAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAG ACAAACGGCGAAACCGGGGAGATCGTGTGGGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGT GCGGAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAAGTGAATATCGTGAAAAAGACCGAGGTGCAGA CAGGCGGCTTCAGCAAAGAGTCTATCCTGCCCAAGAGGAACAGCGATAAGCTGATC GCCAGAAAGAAGGACTGGGACCCTAAGAAGTACGGCGGCTTCGACAGCCCCACCGT GGCCTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGCCAAAGTGGAAAAGGGCAAGGGAGGGGGAGGCA GCCCTTCAGGGCAGATCAGCAACCAGGCCCTGGCTCTGGCCCCTAGCTCCGCTCCAG TGCTGGCCCAGACTATGGTGCCCTCTAGTGCTATGGTGCCTCTGGCCCAGCCACCTG CTCCAGCCCCTGTGCTGACCCCAGGACCACCCCAGTCACTGAGCGCTCCAGTGCCCA AGTCTACACAGGCCGGCGAGGGGACTCTGAGTGAAGCTCTGCTGCACCTGCAGTTC GACGCTGATGAGGACCTGGGAGCTCTGCTGGGGAACAGCACCGATCCCGGAGTGTT CACAGATCTGGCCTCCGTGGACAACTCTGAGTTTCAGCAGCTGCTGAATCAGGGCGT GTCCATGTCTCATAGTACAGCCGAACCAATGCTGATGGAGTACCCCGAAGCCATTAC CCGGCTGGTGACCGGCAGCCAGCGGCCCCCCGACCCCGCTCCAACTCCCCTGGGAA CCAGCGGCCTGCCTAATGGGCTGTCCGGAGATGAAGACTTCTCAAGCATCGCTGATA TGGACTTTAGTGCCCTGCTGTCACAGATTTCCTCTAGTGGGCAGGGAGGGGGGGGCA GCTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAAGAGCTGCTGGGGATCACCATCATGGAAAGA AGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAATCCCATCGACTTTCTGGAAGCCAAGGGCTACAAAGAAGT GAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCTAAGTACTCCCTGTTCGAGCTGGAAAACG GCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGGCCTCTGCCGGCGAACTGCAGAAGGGAAACGAACTGGCC CTGCCCTCCAAATATGTGAACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGCCACTATGAGAAGCTGAAG GGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAGAAACAGCTGTTTGTGGAACAGCACAAGCACTA CCTGGACGAGATCATCGAGCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAGAGAGTGATCCTGGCCG ACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGCCTACAACAAGCACCGGGATAAGCCCATC AGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAATATCATCCACCTGTTTACCCTGACCAATCTGGGAGCCCCT GCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACCATCGACCGGAAGAGGTACACCAGCACCAA AGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGATCCACCAGAGCATCACCGGCCTGTACGAGACAC GGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCGACagcgctGGAGGAGGTGGAAGCGGAGGAGG AGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGTAGCggacctaagaaaaagaggaaggtggggccgct pSAMca064 dCas9(K1153-P65, 1XGS) - AA (SEQ ID NO: 218) DKKYSIGLAIGTNSVGWAVITDEYKVPSKKFKVLGNTDRHSIKKNLIGALLFD SGETAEATRLKRTARRRYTRRKNRICYLQEIFSNEMAKVDDSFFHRLEESFLVEEDKKHE RHPIFGNIVDEVAYHEKYPTIYHLRKKLVDSTDKADLRLIYLALAHMIKFRGHFLIEGDL NPDNSDVDKLFIQLVQTYNQLFEENPINASGVDAKAILSARLSKSRRLENLIAQLPGEKK NGLFGNLIALSLGLTPNFKSNFDLAEDAKLQLSKDTYDDDLDNLLAQIGDQYADLFLAA KNLSDAILLSDILRVNTEITKAPLSASMIKRYDEHHQDLTLLKALVRQQLPEKYKEIFFDQ SKNGYAGYIDGGASQEEFYKFIKPILEKMDGTEELLVKLNREDLLRKQRTFDNGSIPHQI HLGELHAILRRQEDFYPFLKDNREKIEKILTFRIPYYVGPLARGNSRFAWMTRKSEETITP WNFEEVVDKGASAQSFIERMTNFDKNLPNEKVLPKHSLLYEYFTVYNELTKVKYVTEG MRKPAFLSGEQKKAIVDLLFKTNRKVTVKQLKEDYFKKIECFDSVEISGVEDRFNASLG TYHDLLKIIKDKDFLDNEENEDILEDIVLTLTLFEDREMIEERLKTYAHLFDDKVMKQLK RRRYTGWGRLSRKLINGIRDKQSGKTILDFLKSDGFANRNFMQLIHDDSLTFKEDIQKAQ VSGQGDSLHEHIANLAGSPAIKKGILQTVKVVDELVKVMGRHKPENIVIEMARENQTTQ KGQKNSRERMKRIEEGIKELGSQILKEHPVENTQLQNEKLYLYYLQNGRDMYVDQELDI NRLSDYDVDAIVPQSFLKDDSIDNKVLTRSDKNRGKSDNVPSEEVVKKMKNYWRQLLN AKLITQRKFDNLTKAERGGLSELDKAGFIKRQLVETRQITKHVAQILDSRMNTKYDEND KLIREVKVITLKSKLVSDFRKDFQFYKVREINNYHHAHDAYLNAVVGTALIKKYPKLES EFVYGDYKVYDVRKMIAKSEQEIGKATAKYFFYSNIMNFFKTEITLANGEIRKRPLIETN GETGEIVWDKGRDFATVRKVLSMPQVNIVKKTEVQTGGFSKESILPKRNSDKLIARKKD WDPKKYGGFDSPTVAYSVLVVAKVEKGKGGGGSPSGQISNQALALAPSSAPVLAQTMV PSSAMVPLAQPPAPAPVLTPGPPQSLSAPVPKSTQAGEGTLSEALLHLQFDADEDLGALL GNSTDPGVFTDLASVDNSEFQQLLNQGVSMSHSTAEPMLMEYPEAITRLVTGSQRPPDP APTPLGTSGLPNGLSGDEDFSSIADMDFSALLSQISSSGQGGGGSSKKLKSVKELLGITIM ERSSFEKNPIDFLEAKGYKEVKKDLIIKLPKYSLFELENGRKRMLASAGELQKGNELALP SKYVNFLYLASHYEKLKGSPEDNEQKQLFVEQHKHYLDEIIEQISEFSKRVILADANLDK VLSAYNKHRDKPIREQAENIIHLFTLTNLGAPAAFKYFDTTIDRKRYTSTKEVLDATLIHQ SITGLYETRIDLSQLGGDSAGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSGPKKKRKVAAA pSAMca065 dCas9(K1153-P65, 3XGS) - DNA (SEQ ID NO: 219) atgGACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGCCATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGGC TGGGCCGTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGGTGCTGGG CAACACCGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCCCTGCTGTTCGACA GCGGCGAAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAACCGCCAGAAGAAGATACAC CAGACGGAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAGAGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCA AGGTGGACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGACTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGAT AAGAAGCACGAGCGGCACCCCATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCA CGAGAAGTACCCCACCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACA AGGCCGACCTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCC ACTTCCTGATCGAGGGCGACCTGAACCCCGACAACAGCGACGTGGACAAGCTGTTC ATCCAGCTGGTGCAGACCTACAACCAGCTGTTCGAGGAAAACCCCATCAACGCCAG CGGCGTGGACGCCAAGGCCATCCTGTCTGCCAGACTGAGCAAGAGCAGACGGCTGG AAAATCTGATCGCCCAGCTGCCCGGCGAGAAGAAGAATGGCCTGTTCGGCAACCTG ATTGCCCTGAGCCTGGGCCTGACCCCCAACTTCAAGAGCAACTTCGACCTGGCCGAG GATGCCAAACTGCAGCTGAGCAAGGACACCTACGACGACGACCTGGACAACCTGCT GGCCCAGATCGGCGACCAGTACGCCGACCTGTTTCTGGCCGCCAAGAACCTGTCCG ACGCCATCCTGCTGAGCGACATCCTGAGAGTGAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCC CTGAGCGCCTCTATGATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCCTGCT GAAAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAAAGAGATTTTCTTCGACC AGAGCAAGAACGGCTACGCCGGCTACATTGACGGCGGAGCCAGCCAGGAAGAGTTC TACAAGTTCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGGACGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGT GAAGCTGAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGGAAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGC ATCCCCCACCAGATCCACCTGGGAGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGA TTTTTACCCATTCCTGAAGGACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCG CATCCCCTACTACGTGGGCCCTCTGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGA CCAGAAAGAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACAA GGGCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGATGACCAACTTCGATAAGAACCTGC CCAACGAGAAGGTGCTGCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTACTTCACCGTGTAT AACGAGCTGACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAATGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCT GAGCGGCGAGCAGAAAAAGGCCATCGTGGACCTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAA GTGACCGTGAAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGACTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCTTCGACTC CGTGGAAATCTCCGGCGTGGAAGATCGGTTCAACGCCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACG ATCTGCTGAAAATTATCAAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGAC ATTCTGGAAGATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGAGGACAGAGAGATGATCGA GGAACGGCTGAAAACCTATGCCCACCTGTTCGACGACAAAGTGATGAAGCAGCTGA AGCGGCGGAGATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGCTGATCAACGGCATC CGGGACAAGCAGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGATTTCCTGAAGTCCGACGGCTTCGC CAACAGAAACTTCATGCAGCTGATCCACGACGACAGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACA TCCAGAAAGCCCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGGCGATAGCCTGCACGAGCACATTGCCAAT CTGGCCGGCAGCCCCGCCATTAAGAAGGGCATCCTGCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGA CGAGCTCGTGAAAGTGATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCCGAGAACATCGTGATCGAAATGG CCAGAGAGAACCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAGAAGAACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAA GCGGATCGAAGAGGGCATCAAAGAGCTGGGCAGCCAGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCC GTGGAAAACACCCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAAGCTGTACCTGTACTACCTGCAGAATGG GCGGGATATGTACGTGGACCAGGAACTGGACATCAACCGGCTGTCCGACTACGATG TGGACgcTATCGTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAAGGACGACTCCATCGACAACAAGGTGC TGACCAGAAGCGACAAGAACCGGGGCAAGAGCGACAACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGT CGTGAAGAAGATGAAGAACTACTGGCGGCAGCTGCTGAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCC AGAGAAAGTTCGACAATCTGACCAAGGCCGAGAGAGGCGGCCTGAGCGAACTGGAT AAGGCCGGCTTCATCAAGAGACAGCTGGTGGAAACCCGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGT GGCACAGATCCTGGACTCCCGGATGAACACTAAGTACGACGAGAATGACAAGCTGA TCCGGGAAGTGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCAAGCTGGTGTCCGATTTCCGGAAG GATTTCCAGTTTTACAAAGTGCGCGAGATCAACAACTACCACCACGCCCACGACGCC TACCTGAACGCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATCAAAAAGTACCCTAAGCTGGAAAG CGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGACTACAAGGTGTACGACGTGCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGA GCGAGCAGGAAATCGGCAAGGCTACCGCCAAGTACTTCTTCTACAGCAACATCATG AACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGATTACCCTGGCCAACGGCGAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCT GATCGAGACAAACGGCGAAACCGGGGAGATCGTGTGGGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTG CCACCGTGCGGAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAAGTGAATATCGTGAAAAAGACCGAG GTGCAGACAGGCGGCTTCAGCAAAGAGTCTATCCTGCCCAAGAGGAACAGCGATAA GCTGATCGCCAGAAAGAAGGACTGGGACCCTAAGAAGTACGGCGGCTTCGACAGCC CCACCGTGGCCTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGCCAAAGTGGAAAAGGGCAAGGGCGGG GGAGGCTCCGGTGGTGGGGGCAGCGGAGGGGGGGGCAGCCCTTCAGGGCAGATCA GCAACCAGGCCCTGGCTCTGGCCCCTAGCTCCGCTCCAGTGCTGGCCCAGACTATGG TGCCCTCTAGTGCTATGGTGCCTCTGGCCCAGCCACCTGCTCCAGCCCCTGTGCTGA CCCCAGGACCACCCCAGTCACTGAGCGCTCCAGTGCCCAAGTCTACACAGGCCGGC GAGGGGACTCTGAGTGAAGCTCTGCTGCACCTGCAGTTCGACGCTGATGAGGACCT GGGAGCTCTGCTGGGGAACAGCACCGATCCCGGAGTGTTCACAGATCTGGCCTCCG TGGACAACTCTGAGTTTCAGCAGCTGCTGAATCAGGGCGTGTCCATGTCTCATAGTA CAGCCGAACCAATGCTGATGGAGTACCCCGAAGCCATTACCCGGCTGGTGACCGGC AGCCAGCGGCCCCCCGACCCCGCTCCAACTCCCCTGGGAACCAGCGGCCTGCCTAAT GGGCTGTCCGGAGATGAAGACTTCTCAAGCATCGCTGATATGGACTTTAGTGCCCTG CTGTCACAGATTTCCTCTAGTGGGCAGGGCGGGGGAGGCTCCGGTGGTGGGGGCAG CGGAGGGGGGGGCAGCTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAAGAGCTGCTGGGGATC ACCATCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAATCCCATCGACTTTCTGGAAGCCAA GGGCTACAAAGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCTAAGTACTCCCTGT TCGAGCTGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGGCCTCTGCCGGCGAACTGCAGAAG GGAAACGAACTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTGAACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGCCAC TATGAGAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAGGATAATGAGCAGAAACAGCTGTTTGTGGA ACAGCACAAGCACTACCTGGACGAGATCATCGAGCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAGA GAGTGATCCTGGCCGACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGCCTACAACAAGCAC CGGGATAAGCCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAATATCATCCACCTGTTTACCCTGAC CAATCTGGGAGCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACCATCGACCGGAAGAG GTACACCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGATCCACCAGAGCATCACCG GCCTGTACGAGACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGGCGACagcgctGGAGGAGG TGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGTAGCggacctaagaaaaagaggaaggtggcg gccgct pSAMca065 dCas9(K1153-P65, 3XGS) - AA (SEQ ID NO: 220) MDKKYSIGLAIGTNSVGWAVITDEYKVPSKKFKVLGNTDRHSIKKNLIGALLF DSGETAEATRLKRTARRRYTRRKNRICYLQEIFSNEMAKVDDSFFHRLEESFLVEEDKK HERHPIFGNIVDEVAYHEKYPTIYHLRKKLVDSTDKADLRLIYLALAHMIKFRGHFLIEG DLNPDNSDVDKLFIQLVQTYNQLFEENPINASGVDAKAILSARLSKSRRLENLIAQLPGE KKNGLFGNLIALSLGLTPNFKSNFDLAEDAKLQLSKDTYDDDLDNLLAQIGDQYADLFL AAKNLSDAILLSDILRVNTEITKAPLSASMIKRYDEHHQDLTLLKALVRQQLPEKYKEIFF DQSKNGYAGYIDGGASQEEFYKFIKPILEKMDGTEELLVKLNREDLLRKQRTFDNGSIPH QIHLGELHAILRRQEDFYPFLKDNREKIEKILTFRIPYYVGPLARGNSRFAWMTRKSEETI TPWNFEEVVDKGASAQSFIERMTNFDKNLPNEKVLPKHSLLYEYFTVYNELTKVKYVTE GMRKPAFLSGEQKKAIVDLLFKTNRKVTVKQLKEDYFKKIECFDSVEISGVEDRFNASL GTYHDLLKIIKDKDFLDNEENEDILEDIVLTLTLFEDREMIEERLKTYAHLFDDKVMKQL KRRRYTGWGRLSRKLINGIRDKQSGKTILDFLKSDGFANRNFMQLIHDDSLTFKEDIQKA QVSGQGDSLHEHIANLAGSPAIKKGILQTVKVVDELVKVMGRHKPENIVIEMARENQTT QKGQKNSRERMKRIEEGIKELGSQILKEHPVENTQLQNEKLYLYYLQNGRDMYVDQEL DINRLSDYDVDAIVPQSFLKDDSIDNKVLTRSDKNRGKSDNVPSEEVVKKMKNYWRQL LNAKLITQRKFDNLTKAERGGLSELDKAGFIKRQLVETRQITKHVAQILDSRMNTKYDE NDKLIREVKVITLKSKLVSDFRKDFQFYKVREINNYHHAHDAYLNAVVGTALIKKYPKL ESEFVYGDYKVYDVRKMIAKSEQEIGKATAKYFFYSNIMNFFKTEITLANGEIRKRPLIET NGETGEIVWDKGRDFATVRKVLSMPQVNIVKKTEVQTGGFSKESILPKRNSDKLIARKK DWDPKKYGGFDSPTVAYSVLVVAKVEKGKGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSPSGQISNQALALA PSSAPVLAQTMVPSSAMVPLAQPPAPAPVLTPGPPQSLSAPVPKSTQAGEGTLSEALLHL QFDADEDLGALLGNSTDPGVFTDLASVDNSEFQQLLNQGVSMSHSTAEPMLMEYPEAIT RLVTGSQRPPDPAPTPLGTSGLPNGLSGDEDFSSIADMDFSALLSQISSSGQGGGGSGGG GSGGGGSSKKLKSVKELLGITIMERSSFEKNPIDFLEAKGYKEVKKDLIIKLPKYSLFELE NGRKRMLASAGELQKGNELALPSKYVNFLYLASHYEKLKGSPEDNEQKQLFVEQHKH YLDEIIEQISEFSKRVILADANLDKVLSAYNKHRDKPIREQAENIIHLFTLTNLGAPAAFKY FDTTIDRKRYTSTKEVLDATLIHQSITGLYETRIDLSQLGGDSAGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSG PKKKRKVAAA

Example 18: New Catalytically Inactive dCas9 Proteins

In another aspect of the invention, novel dCas9 mutants are created. Catalytically inactive dCas9 are generated by combination of D10A and N863A mutations, rather than D10A and H840A mutations.

The catalytically inactive dCas9 mutant used in the literature and Applicants' previous experiments was generated by mutations D10A and H840A within the wildtype Cas9 protein. From the crystal structure, Applicants made the observation that H840A fails to form a functional DNA-nickase. This result suggests that the H840A mutation has a greater dysfunctional effect on the Cas9 protein that originally hypothesized; the original theory being that H840A would result in loss of a single nucleopytic site, with no other effects. If the H840A mutation is disrupting other functions or conformational properties of the dCas9 protein, it stands to reason that a dCas9-activator fusion might be partially compromised by H840A. Thus, Applicants are interested in finding other mutations within the HNH domain which could knock out HNH nuclease activity, without disrupting other Cas9 functions. The Cas9/RNA/DNA crystal structure manuscript identifies mutation N863A as precisely such a mutation: N863A knocks out Cas9 double stranded nuclease activity, but permits nickase activity, suggesting that the global function of N863A Cas9 is not fully disrupted. In light of this observation, Applicants have synthesized a double knockout D10A N863A Cas9 mutant for use as a dCas9-activator.

Corresponding Constructs

pSAMca041 dCas(N863A)-vp64

Sequence information for creating catalytically inactive dCas9 by combination of D10A and N863A mutations, rather than D10A and H840A mutations is provided below:

pSAMca041 dCas(N863A)-vp64-DNA (SEQ ID NO: 221) atgGACAAGAAGTACAGCATCGGCCTGGCCATCGGCACCAACTCTGTGGG CTGGGCCGTGATCACCGACGAGTACAAGGTGCCCAGCAAGAAATTCAAGG TGCTGGGCAACACCGACCGGCACAGCATCAAGAAGAACCTGATCGGAGCC CTGCTGTTCGACAGCGGCGAAACAGCCGAGGCCACCCGGCTGAAGAGAAC CGCCAGAAGAAGATACACCAGACGGAAGAACCGGATCTGCTATCTGCAAG AGATCTTCAGCAACGAGATGGCCAAGGTGGACGACAGCTTCTTCCACAGA CTGGAAGAGTCCTTCCTGGTGGAAGAGGATAAGAAGCACGAGCGGCACCC CATCTTCGGCAACATCGTGGACGAGGTGGCCTACCACGAGAAGTACCCCA CCATCTACCACCTGAGAAAGAAACTGGTGGACAGCACCGACAAGGCCGAC CTGCGGCTGATCTATCTGGCCCTGGCCCACATGATCAAGTTCCGGGGCCA CTTCCTGATCGAGGGCGACCTGAACCCCGACAACAGCGACGTGGACAAGC TGTTCATCCAGCTGGTGCAGACCTACAACCAGCTGTTCGAGGAAAACCCC ATCAACGCCAGCGGCGTGGACGCCAAGGCCATCCTGTCTGCCAGACTGAG CAAGAGCAGACGGCTGGAAAATCTGATCGCCCAGCTGCCCGGCGAGAAGA AGAATGGCCTGTTCGGCAACCTGATTGCCCTGAGCCTGGGCCTGACCCCC AACTTCAAGAGCAACTTCGACCTGGCCGAGGATGCCAAACTGCAGCTGAG CAAGGACACCTACGACGACGACCTGGACAACCTGCTGGCCCAGATCGGCG ACCAGTACGCCGACCTGTTTCTGGCCGCCAAGAACCTGTCCGACGCCATC CTGCTGAGCGACATCCTGAGAGTGAACACCGAGATCACCAAGGCCCCCCT GAGCGCCTCTATGATCAAGAGATACGACGAGCACCACCAGGACCTGACCC TGCTGAAAGCTCTCGTGCGGCAGCAGCTGCCTGAGAAGTACAAAGAGATT TTCTTCGACCAGAGCAAGAACGGCTACGCCGGCTACATTGACGGCGGAGC CAGCCAGGAAGAGTTCTACAAGTTCATCAAGCCCATCCTGGAAAAGATGG ACGGCACCGAGGAACTGCTCGTGAAGCTGAACAGAGAGGACCTGCTGCGG AAGCAGCGGACCTTCGACAACGGCAGCATCCCCCACCAGATCCACCTGGG AGAGCTGCACGCCATTCTGCGGCGGCAGGAAGATTTTTACCCATTCCTGA AGGACAACCGGGAAAAGATCGAGAAGATCCTGACCTTCCGCATCCCCTAC TACGTGGGCCCTCTGGCCAGGGGAAACAGCAGATTCGCCTGGATGACCAG AAAGAGCGAGGAAACCATCACCCCCTGGAACTTCGAGGAAGTGGTGGACA AGGGCGCTTCCGCCCAGAGCTTCATCGAGCGGATGACCAACTTCGATAAG AACCTGCCCAACGAGAAGGTGCTGCCCAAGCACAGCCTGCTGTACGAGTA CTTCACCGTGTATAACGAGCTGACCAAAGTGAAATACGTGACCGAGGGAA TGAGAAAGCCCGCCTTCCTGAGCGGCGAGCAGAAAAAGGCCATCGTGGAC CTGCTGTTCAAGACCAACCGGAAAGTGACCGTGAAGCAGCTGAAAGAGGA CTACTTCAAGAAAATCGAGTGCTTCGACTCCGTGGAAATCTCCGGCGTGG AAGATCGGTTCAACGCCTCCCTGGGCACATACCACGATCTGCTGAAAATT ATCAAGGACAAGGACTTCCTGGACAATGAGGAAAACGAGGACATTCTGGA AGATATCGTGCTGACCCTGACACTGTTTGAGGACAGAGAGATGATCGAGG AACGGCTGAAAACCTATGCCCACCTGTTCGACGACAAAGTGATGAAGCAG CTGAAGCGGCGGAGATACACCGGCTGGGGCAGGCTGAGCCGGAAGCTGAT CAACGGCATCCGGGACAAGCAGTCCGGCAAGACAATCCTGGATTTCCTGA AGTCCGACGGCTTCGCCAACAGAAACTTCATGCAGCTGATCCACGACGAC AGCCTGACCTTTAAAGAGGACATCCAGAAAGCCCAGGTGTCCGGCCAGGG CGATAGCCTGCACGAGCACATTGCCAATCTGGCCGGCAGCCCCGCCATTA AGAAGGGCATCCTGCAGACAGTGAAGGTGGTGGACGAGCTCGTGAAAGTG ATGGGCCGGCACAAGCCCGAGAACATCGTGATCGAAATGGCCAGAGAGAA CCAGACCACCCAGAAGGGACAGAAGAACAGCCGCGAGAGAATGAAGCGGA TCGAAGAGGGCATCAAAGAGCTGGGCAGCCAGATCCTGAAAGAACACCCC GTGGAAAACACCCAGCTGCAGAACGAGAAGCTGTACCTGTACTACCTGCA GAATGGGCGGGATATGTACGTGGACCAGGAACTGGACATCAACCGGCTGT CCGACTACGATGTGGACCACATCGTGCCTCAGAGCTTTCTGAAGGACGAC TCCATCGACAACAAGGTGCTGACCAGAAGCGACAAGGCCCGGGGCAAGAG CGACAACGTGCCCTCCGAAGAGGTCGTGAAGAAGATGAAGAACTACTGGC GGCAGCTGCTGAACGCCAAGCTGATTACCCAGAGAAAGTTCGACAATCTG ACCAAGGCCGAGAGAGGCGGCCTGAGCGAACTGGATAAGGCCGGCTTCAT CAAGAGACAGCTGGTGGAAACCCGGCAGATCACAAAGCACGTGGCACAGA TCCTGGACTCCCGGATGAACACTAAGTACGACGAGAATGACAAGCTGATC CGGGAAGTGAAAGTGATCACCCTGAAGTCCAAGCTGGTGTCCGATTTCCG GAAGGATTTCCAGTTTTACAAAGTGCGCGAGATCAACAACTACCACCACG CCCACGACGCCTACCTGAACGCCGTCGTGGGAACCGCCCTGATCAAAAAG TACCCTAAGCTGGAAAGCGAGTTCGTGTACGGCGACTACAAGGTGTACGA CGTGCGGAAGATGATCGCCAAGAGCGAGCAGGAAATCGGCAAGGCTACCG CCAAGTACTTCTTCTACAGCAACATCATGAACTTTTTCAAGACCGAGATT ACCCTGGCCAACGGCGAGATCCGGAAGCGGCCTCTGATCGAGACAAACGG CGAAACCGGGGAGATCGTGTGGGATAAGGGCCGGGATTTTGCCACCGTGC GGAAAGTGCTGAGCATGCCCCAAGTGAATATCGTGAAAAAGACCGAGGTG CAGACAGGCGGCTTCAGCAAAGAGTCTATCCTGCCCAAGAGGAACAGCGA TAAGCTGATCGCCAGAAAGAAGGACTGGGACCCTAAGAAGTACGGCGGCT TCGACAGCCCCACCGTGGCCTATTCTGTGCTGGTGGTGGCCAAAGTGGAA AAGGGCAAGTCCAAGAAACTGAAGAGTGTGAAAGAGCTGCTGGGGATCAC CATCATGGAAAGAAGCAGCTTCGAGAAGAATCCCATCGACTTTCTGGAAG CCAAGGGCTACAAAGAAGTGAAAAAGGACCTGATCATCAAGCTGCCTAAG TACTCCCTGTTCGAGCTGGAAAACGGCCGGAAGAGAATGCTGGCCTCTGC CGGCGAACTGCAGAAGGGAAACGAACTGGCCCTGCCCTCCAAATATGTGA ACTTCCTGTACCTGGCCAGCCACTATGAGAAGCTGAAGGGCTCCCCCGAG GATAATGAGCAGAAACAGCTGTTTGTGGAACAGCACAAGCACTACCTGGA CGAGATCATCGAGCAGATCAGCGAGTTCTCCAAGAGAGTGATCCTGGCCG ACGCTAATCTGGACAAAGTGCTGTCCGCCTACAACAAGCACCGGGATAAG CCCATCAGAGAGCAGGCCGAGAATATCATCCACCTGTTTACCCTGACCAA TCTGGGAGCCCCTGCCGCCTTCAAGTACTTTGACACCACCATCGACCGGA AGAGGTACACCAGCACCAAAGAGGTGCTGGACGCCACCCTGATCCACCAG AGCATCACCGGCCTGTACGAGACACGGATCGACCTGTCTCAGCTGGGAGG CGACagcgctGGAGGAGGTGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAGGAAGCGGAGGAGGAG GTAGCggacctaagaaaaagaggaaggtggcggccgctggatccGGACGG GCTGACGCATTGGACGATTTTGATCTGGATATGCTGGGAAGTGACGCCCT CGATGATTTTGACCTTGACATGCTTGGTTCGGATGCCCTTGATGACTTTG ACCTCGACATGCTCGGCAGTGACGCCCTTGATGATTTCGACCTGGACATG CTGATTAAC pSAMca041 dCas(N863A)-vp64-amino acid (SEQ ID NO: 222) MDKKYSIGLAIGTNSVGWAVITDEYKVPSKKFKVLGNTDRHSIKKNLIGA LLFDSGETAEATRLKRTARRRYTRRKNRICYLQEIFSNEMAKVDDSFFHR LEESFLVEEDKKHERHPIFGNIVDEVAYHEKYPTIYHLRKKLVDSTDKAD LRLIYLALAHMIKFRGHFLIEGDLNPDNSDVDKLFIQLVQTYNQLFEENP INASGVDAKAILSARLSKSRRLENLIAQLPGEKKNGLFGNLIALSLGLTP NFKSNFDLAEDAKLQLSKDTYDDDLDNLLAQIGDQYADLFLAAKNLSDAI LLSDILRVNTEITKAPLSASMIKRYDEHHQDLTLLKALVRQQLPEKYKEI FFDQSKNGYAGYIDGGASQEEFYKFIKPILEKMDGTEELLVKLNREDLLR KQRTFDNGSIPHQIHLGELHAILRRQEDFYPFLKDNREKIEKILTFRIPY YVGPLARGNSRFAWMTRKSEETITPWNFEEVVDKGASAQSFIERMTNFDK NLPNEKVLPKHSLLYEYFTVYNELTKVKYVTEGMRKPAFLSGEQKKAIVD LLFKTNRKVTVKQLKEDYFKKIECFDSVEISGVEDRFNASLGTYHDLLKI IKDKDFLDNEENEDILEDIVLTLTLFEDREMIEERLKTYAHLFDDKVMKQ LKRRRYTGWGRLSRKLINGIRDKQSGKTILDFLKSDGFANRNFMQLIHDD SLTFKEDIQKAQVSGQGDSLHEHIANLAGSPAIKKGILQTVKVVDELVKV MGRHKPENIVIEMARENQTTQKGQKNSRERMKRIEEGIKELGSQILKEHP VENTQLQNEKLYLYYLQNGRDMYVDQELDINRLSDYDVDHIVPQSFLKDD SIDNKVLTRSDKARGKSDNVPSEEVVKKMKNYWRQLLNAKLITQRKFDNL TKAERGGLSELDKAGFIKRQLVETRQITKHVAQILDSRMNTKYDENDKLI REVKVITLKSKLVSDFRKDFQFYKVREINNYHHAHDAYLNAVVGTALIKK YPKLESEFVYGDYKVYDVRKMIAKSEQEIGKATAKYFFYSNIMNFFKTEI TLANGEIRKRPLIETNGETGEIVWDKGRDFATVRKVLSMPQVNIVKKTEV QTGGFSKESILPKRNSDKLIARKKDWDPKKYGGFDSPTVAYSVLVVAKVE KGKSKKLKSVKELLGITIMERSSFEKNPIDFLEAKGYKEVKKDLIIKLPK YSLFELENGRKRMLASAGELQKGNELALPSKYVNFLYLASHYEKLKGSPE DNEQKQLFVEQHKHYLDEIIEQISEFSKRVILADANLDKVLSAYNKHRDK PIREQAENIIHLFTLTNLGAPAAFKYFDTTIDRKRYTSTKEVLDATLIHQ SITGLYETRIDLSQLGGDSAGGGGSGGGGSGGGGSGPKKKRKVAAAGSGR ADALDDFDLDMLGSDALDDFDLDMLGSDALDDFDLDMLGSDALDDFDLDM LIN

Example 19: MS2 sgRNA Sequence Architecture—New MS2 dCas9 sgRNA Versions

Applicants generated additional 3′ MS2 constructs and other MS2 sgRNA modifications to understand the effects of MS2 sgRNA sequence architecture. The experiments performed focused on two further ideas regarding the MS2 sgRNA sequence architecture.

First, the idea of placing the MS2 binding stems at the 3′ end of the sgRNA, rather than inserting these binding sites into the native stemloops of the sgRNA. The use of a pair of 3′ MS2 binding sites had previously been described in Mali, Prashant, et al. “CAS9 transcriptional activators for target specificity screening and paired nickases for cooperative genome engineering.” Nature biotechnology (2013)), though the system was found to perform more poorly than the standard dCas9-VP64/sgRNA activation system. Applicants found that an sgRNA, of their own design, with 2 MS2 binding sites at the 3′ end of the sgRNA, as well as MS2 sites at both the tetraloop and stemloop 2, activated both ASCL1 and MYOD1 at a higher level than the 3′ MS2 sgRNA from Mali et al. (see FIG. 50 ) However, Applicants' MS2 1.0, with MS2 sites only at the tetraloop and stemloop 2, was more potent than either of the 3′ MS2 sgRNA architectures. (see FIG. 50 )

Second, Applicants tested variations within the MS2 1.0 architectures. These modifications included but were not limited to removing the bulge from the MS2 1.0 binding site stem, removing the stabilizing GC tract that had been added to MS2 1.0, shortening the engineered stem by replacing the natural sgRNA stem with the stem of the MS2 binding site, as well as combinations of these approaches. These modifications had little effect on activation level for either ASCL1 or MYOD1, suggesting that the MS2 stemloops are somewhat robust to structural alterations within the MS2/dCas9/sgRNA activation context. In addition to the tetraloop modifications shown in FIG. 51 , equivalent modifications were also tested for the MS2 binding site at stemloop 2, with similar results.

dCas9 protein modifications (NLS, N863A): Applicants tested two hypotheses for improvement of the dCas9-activator protein. First, the addition of a second SV40 nuclear localization signal, in addition to the NLS contained in the dCas9 to VP64 linker, was examined as a method of improving dCas9 nuclear localization and transcriptional modulation activity. Placement of the second NLS at the N-terminus of the dCas9 was observed to increase activation in several contexts. The effect was diminished when the second NLS was placed at the C-terminus of the VP64 activation domain. Later experiments (FIGS. 54 and 55 ) would confirm these effects and suggest a possible improvement by use of an N-terminal alpha-importin NLS, rather than a second SV40 signal.

Second, Applicants created a version of dCas9 using the N863A mutation, demonstrated in Nishimasu et al., “Crystal structure of Cas9 in complex with guide RNA and target DNA.” Cell. 2014 Feb. 27; 156(5):935-49, to be a functional nickase-creating mutation site. This mutation replaces the H840A mutation which was observed to be a suboptimal nickase-creating mutation, suggesting that the H840A mutation, though it can be used with the D10A mutation to abolish nuclease activity, is detrimental in some way to the conformation or functionality of the nickase or dCas9 protein. Applicants observed that the N863A dCas9 acted as a more potent activator protein in certain contexts as shown in FIGS. 52 and 53 for ASCL1 and MYOD1, respectively.

New MS2 activator fusions proteins (HSF1, MyoTAD): Based on Applicants' previous finding that a combination of two different activation domains (P65 and VP64) in the same activator complex (dCas and MS2) yielded greater activation than either domain simply used twice, Applicants wanted to test the potential for synergy between different activation domains further. Applicants constructed fusion proteins of MS2 with two distinct activation domains—either P65 in combination with HSF1 activation domain or P65 in combination with MyoD transactivation domain. Applicants observed the fold upregulation in both ASCL1 and MYOD1 using constructs with different NLS and point mutation dCas-VP64 architectures in combination with MS2 fused to individual or combined activation domains. It was noticed that the addition of an a-importin NLS had a favorable effect on localizing the Cas9 to the nucleus and that the N863A mutation was an advantageous mutation to generate a potent activator (FIGS. 53 and 55 ). Applicants also determined that a combination of different activator domains had an increased effect. E.g., The construct with a p65-HSF1 fusion was found to be a more potent activator than the construct with p65 alone (FIGS. 56 and 57 ).

PP7-VP64 activation: In addition to the MS2 phage coat protein, which Applicants have employed, a number of phage coat proteins exhibit RNA sequence specific binding. Applicants designed and tested an orthogonal activation system using the RNA binding domain from the PP7 phage. This new system includes the usual (previously described) dCas9-activator protein, a PP7-activator fusion protein, and an sgRNA with PP7 binding sites integrated at the tetraloop and stemloop 2. Applicants observed that the PP7 system functions equally as well as the MS2/dCas9/sgRNA activation system. These results suggest that the sgRNA RNA aptamer approach is generalizable and points to the future possibility of orthogonal modulation modalities using dCas9 and mutually exclusive RNA-binding proteins (such as MS2, PP7, qBeta, GA, and others).

Target Diversity:

Difficult activation targets and sgRNA TSS proximity: Applicants' early work on CRISPR/Cas9 transcriptional modulation, as well as the published literature has found the majority of targets to be unamenable to activation by single sgRNA guides. Applicants selected 12 gene targets from the literature and Applicants own work which had previously proven difficult or intractable to dCas9 mediated activation. (see FIG. 58 ) Applicants attempted to activate each of these genes with the MS2-p65-HSF1/SV40-dCas9-VP64/sgRNA system using 1 of 8 guide sequences. Applicants observed significant activation for each of these difficult gene targets, with activation levels for the best guide ranging from 2 fold for MYC to >10,000 for IL1B. 8 of the 12 genes exhibited at least 15 fold expression. (see FIG. 58 ) For each guide sequence tested, the MS2/dCas9 system performed better than the standard dCas9-VP64 architecture, and no standard system fold expression was greater than 2 for any gene. (see FIG. 58 ) Additionally, Applicants observed that the success rate of guide sequences typically increased with closer proximity to the transcriptional start site (TSS) of the target gene. In a preferred embodiment of the invention, for particular targets, within 200 bp of the TSS is deemed to be an advantageous window to select guide RNAs. This information could be useful for selection of sgRNA guide sequences for future experiments.

Activation vs. Basal expression: An open question in the field of artificial endogenous transcriptional modulation is why are some genes more amenable to activation than others? For the difficult targets listed above, Applicants plotted the fold expression of the best guide sequence against the deltaCt value from qPCR for that gene in control samples. These results suggest a strong inverse correlation between basal gene expression (higher deltaCt corresponds to lower basal expression) and maximal transcriptional activation by the MS2/dCas9/sgRNA system. (see FIG. 59 )

Multiplexed activation: One important possible advantage of the ability of Applicants' system to provide robust activation with a single guide would be the capacity to easily activate a panel of genes simultaneously (by co-delivery to multiple guides for these genes), which would be intractable if a large number of guides would be required for activation of each gene alone.

In order to test the ability of Applicants' system (NLS-dCAS(D10,H840A)-NLS-VP64 in combination with MS2-NLS-P65-HSF1) to activate multiple genes simultaneously, Applicants co-transfected guides targeting 2, 4, 6, 8 or 10 genes at once. Activation of multiple genes was highly successful, as even for a combination of 10 genes each gene was activated significantly. (see FIGS. 60-63)

Example 20: Structure-Guided Engineering of a CRISPR-Cas9 Complex for Genome-Scale Gene Activation

Systematic interrogation of the functional organization of genomes requires the ability to perturb gene expression in a robust and generalizable manner. Structure-guided engineering of the CRISPR-Cas9 complex to mediate efficient transcriptional activation at endogenous genomic loci is described. Engineered Cas9 activators are used to investigate sgRNA-targeting rules for effective transcriptional activation, to demonstrate efficient multiplexed activation of 10 genes simultaneously, and to upregulate long intergenic non-coding RNA (lincRNA) transcripts. A library consisting of 70,290 guides targeting all human RefSeq coding isoforms was synthesized and SAM applied in a melanoma model to screen for genes whose activation confers resistance to the RAF inhibitor PLX-4720, an analog of the therapeutic compound vemurafenib. Expected resistance genes, such as EGFR and G protein-coupled receptor proteins, were enriched in the top hits, as were potentially novel resistance genes, such as members of the integrin family. The signature of the top screening hits was significantly predictive of BRAF inhibitor-resistant states in 29 short-term patient tumor cultures as well as 27 different melanoma cell lines and 113 primary and metastatic patient melanomas, demonstrating the potential of Cas9 activators as a powerful genetics tool.

Achieving genome-scale systematic perturbations within intact biological systems is important for elucidating the function of genes and epigenetic regulation. Genetic perturbations can be broadly classified as either loss-of-function or gain-of-function (GOF) based on their mode of action. Various genome-scale loss-of-function screening methods have been developed, including RNA interference^(1,2) and the RNA-guided endonuclease Cas9 from the microbial adaptive immune system CRISPR³. Genome-scale GOF screening approaches have largely remained limited to the use of cDNA library overexpression systems. However, it is difficult to capture the complexity of transcript isoform variance using these libraries, and large cDNA sequences are often difficult to clone into viral expression vectors. Moreover, cDNA constructs tend to overdrive gene expression and may not be reflective of physiological protein levels. More generally, the endogenous regulatory contexts of the overexpressed genes cannot be recapitulated. Therefore, methods to enable genome-scale GOF perturbations at endogenous loci remain sought-after.

Programmable DNA binding proteins have emerged as an exciting platform for modulating transcription at endogenous genomic loci⁴⁻¹³. Among the established synthetic transcription factor platforms, the CRISPR-associated endonuclease Cas9 is most easily scaled to facilitate genome-scale perturbations¹⁴⁻¹⁶ due to the simplicity of programming and producing the system relative to zinc finger proteins and transcription activator-like effectors (TALEs). Cas9 nuclease can be easily converted into a RNA-guided DNA binding protein (dCas9) by inactivating both of its catalytic domains^(17,18). dCas9 can be fused with transcription activation domains and retargeted to the promoter region of endogenous genes to achieve targeted modulation of gene expression^(7,8,10-12). Although the current generation of dCas9-based transcription effectors are able to achieve activation of some endogenous loci, the magnitude of transcriptional up-regulation achieved by individual single-guide RNAs (sgRNAs) typically ranges from low to ineffective^(8,10,12). Targeting a combination of sgRNAs tiling to a given promoter region can result in more robust transcriptional activation¹⁰⁻¹², but this requirement presents enormous challenges for scalability, and in particular for establishing pooled, genome-wide GOF screens using dCas9.

In order to improve and expand applications of Cas9, crystallographic studies, elucidating the atomic structure of the Cas9-sgRNA-target DNA tertiary complex¹⁷, were undertaken, enabling rational engineering of Cas9 and sgRNA. This example provides a series of structure-guided engineering steps resulting in a potent transcription activation complex capable of mediating robust up-regulation with a single sgRNA. Using this new activation system, activation of endogenous genes as well as non-coding RNAs is demonstrated, the design rules for effective sgRNA target sites are elucidated, and a genome-wide dCas9-based transcription activation screening system to study targeted therapy resistance in a cellular model of melanoma is established and applied. These results collectively demonstrate the potentially broad applicability of RNA-guided gain-of-function (GOF) screening for functional genomics research.

Structure-Guided Design of a dCas9-Based Transcription Activation Complex

A key step in transforming the Cas9-sgRNA complex into an effective transcriptional activator is finding optimal anchoring positions for the activation domains. An ideal position would be proximally located relative to the target DNA to allow efficient interaction between the transcription machinery and target DNA, as well as permit unobstructed presentation of the transactivating effector to recruit transcription machinery. The crystal structure of the Streptococcus pyogenes dCas9 (D10A/H840A) in complex with a single guide RNA (sgRNA) and complementary target DNA¹⁷ revealed a ribonucleoprotein complex in which the sgRNA-target DNA heteroduplex serves as a scaffold for the three-dimensional organization of the Cas9 protein domains. The N- and C-termini of Cas9 are located at the opposite side to the sgRNA-target DNA heteroduplex-binding groove (FIG. 64 a ), indicating that fusing transactivating peptides at these locations, as reported in previous dCas9-activator designs, may be suboptimal. It was observed that the tetraloop and stem-loop 2 of the sgRNA protrude outside of the Cas9-sgRNA ribonucleoprotein complex, with the distal 4 bp of each stem completely free of interactions with Cas9 amino acid sidechains (FIG. 70 a ). Both tetraloop and stem-loop 2 are also more proximal to the target DNA than either the N- or C-terminus and could provide better anchoring positions for effectors. Based on these observations and functional data showing that substitutions and deletions in the tetraloop and stem-loop 2 regions of the sgRNA sequence do not affect Cas9 catalytic function¹⁷ (FIG. 64 a ), it was reasoned that the tetraloop and stem-loop 2 can be extended to incorporate protein-interacting aptamers, facilitating the recruitment of effectors to the Cas9 complex (FIG. 64 b ).

A minimal hairpin aptamer capable of binding to the bacteriophage coat protein MS2, which is known to be capable of binding MS2 through strong sequence- and structure-specific interactions in mammalian cells^(18,19), to incorporate into tetraloop and stem-loop 2 (FIG. 70 b ) was chosen. Tests were performed to evaluate whether MS2-mediated recruitment of VP64 to the tetraloop and stem-loop 2 could mediate transcriptional up-regulation more efficiently than a dCas9-VP64 fusion alone. Aptamer-mediated recruitment of MS2-VP64 to either tetraloop (sgRNA 1.1) or stem-loop 2 (sgRNA 1.2) mediated 3- and 5-fold higher levels of Neurog2 up-regulation than a dCas9-VP64 fusion (sgRNA 1.0), respectively. Recruitment of VP64 to both positions (sgRNA 2.0) resulted in an additive effect, leading to 12-fold increase over dCas9-VP64 (sgRNA 1.0). Combining sgRNA 2.0 with dCas9-VP64 instead of dCas9 provided an additional 1.3-fold increase in Neurog2 up-regulation.

To confirm that spatial positioning, and not simply the number of activation domains, is the critical factor for effective transcription activation, sgRNA2.0 was compared to a previously described sgRNA bearing two MS2-binding stem-loops at the 3′ end (sgRNA+2×MS2)¹¹. sgRNA2.0 drove 14- and 8.5-fold higher levels of transcription activation than sgRNA+2×MS2 for ASCL1 and MYOD1, respectively (FIG. 64 d ).

Effector Domains Act in Synergy to Enhance Transcription Activation

To further improve the potency of Cas9-mediated transcription activation, how transcription activation is achieved in natural contexts was considered. Endogenous transcription factors generally act in synergy with co-factors to stimulate transcription²⁰. It was hypothesized that combining VP64 with additional, distinct activation domains could improve activation efficiency through synergy. NF-κB trans-activating subunit p65 was chosen, which, while sharing some common co-factors with VP64, recruits a distinct subset of transcription factors and chromatin remodeling complexes. For example, p65 has been shown to recruit Ap-1, ATF/CREB, and Sp1²¹, whereas VP64 recruits PC4²², CBP/p300²³, and the SWI/SNF complex²⁴.

The effector domain fused to dCas9 and MS2 was varied. Hetero-effector pairing of dCas9 and MS2 fusion proteins (e.g. dCas9-VP64 paired with MS2-p65 or dCas9-p65 with MS2-VP64) provided over 2.5-fold higher transcription activation for both ASCL1 and MYOD1 than same-effector pairing (e.g. dCas9-VP64 paired with MS2-VP64 or dCas9-p65 with MS2-p65) (FIG. 64 e ). This concept of domain synergy was further explored by introducing the activation domain from human heat-shock factor 1 (HSF1) (Marinho et al., Redox Biol 2014) as a third activation domain, and it was demonstrated that an MS2-p65-HSF1 fusion protein further improved transcriptional activation of ASCL1 (12%) and MYOD1 (37%). Additional modifications to the sgRNA as well as Cas9 protein provided only minor improvements (FIG. 70 c-e ). Based on these results it was concluded that the combination of sgRNA2.0, NLS-dCas9-VP64, and MS2-p65-HSF1 comprises the most effective transcription activation system, and designated it SAM. For simplicity, sgRNA2.0 is referred to as sgRNA in subsequent discussions of this example, unless noted otherwise.

Characterization of SAM Efficacy and Determination of sgRNA Efficiency Rules

To thoroughly evaluate the effectiveness of SAM for activating endogenous gene transcription, 12 genes were chosen that have been found previously to be difficult to activate using dCas9-VP64 and individual sgRNA1.0 guides^(8,11,12). For each gene, 8 sgRNA target sites spread across the proximal promoter between −1000 bp and the +1 transcription start site (TSS) were selected. For 9 out of 12 genes, the maximum level of activation achieved using dCas9-VP64 with any of the 8 sgRNA1.0 guides was less than 2-fold, while the remaining three genes (ZFP42, KLF4 and IL1b) were maximally activated between 2- and 5-fold (FIG. 65 a ). In contrast, SAM stimulated transcription at least 2-fold for all genes and more than 15-fold for 8 out of 12 genes. Consistently, SAM performed better than sgRNA1.0+dCas9-VP64 for all 96 guides, with a median gain of 105-fold higher expression up-regulation across all 12 genes.

Previous studies have demonstrated that poor activation efficiency of single sgRNA can be overcome by combining dCas9-VP64 with a pool of sgRNAs tiling the proximal promoter region of the target gene¹⁰⁻¹². Therefore the single sgRNA activation efficiency of SAM was compared with dCas9-VP64 combined with a pool of 8 same-gene targeting sgRNA 1.0 guides. For most genes, SAM with a single sgRNA performed more robustly than dCas9-VP64 with pools of 8 sgRNA1.0 guides (FIG. 65 b ). On average, SAM with single sgRNAs achieved 15 times more activation than dCas9-VP64 combined with pools of 8 sgRNA 1.0 guides. For all 12 genes, SAM incorporating three distinct activation domains (dCas9-VP64 with either MS2-p65-HSF1 or MS2-p65-MyoD1, whereas MyoD1 is a transactivating peptide derived from the human MYOD1 gene²⁵) performed better than SAM incorporating only two distinct activation domains (dCas9-VP64 with MS2-p65) (FIG. 71 a ). For 9 out of 12 genes, triple-domain SAM achieved between 42% to 196% greater activation than double-domain SAM (p<0.01, Student's t-test with FDR correction). Also, triple-domain SAM with a non-targeting sgRNA generated less than 1% non-specific activation compared to activation by a targeting sgRNA (FIGS. 71 b and c ).

Next, studies were performed to determine factors that contribute inter- and intragenic variability of activation efficiency by different sgRNAs. For intergene variability, the variation in the activation levels between sgRNAs and target genes was analyzed. Differences in activation levels could stem from how tightly a given locus is regulated and/or from variation in its basal level of transcription. Thus, correlation between basal transcription and the level of transcription activation achieved using SAM was of particular interest. Using the relative transcript level of target genes in control samples, a highly significant correlation between the inverse of basal transcript level and the fold up-regulation achieved using SAM was observed (FIG. 65 c ; r=0.94, p<0.0001). Whereas highly expressed genes (e.g. MYC, VEGFA, TERT, SOX2) were moderately upregulated, lowly expressed genes (e.g. HBG1, IL1B, ZFP42) were more significantly upregulated by SAM.

For intragenic variability, the activation data was aggregated for all 96 guides and the distance between the guide RNA target site and the TSS was found to be the most significant predictor of activation efficiency (FIG. 65 d ; r=0.67, p<0.0001). The strongest guides for each gene were always located within −200 bp and +1. A high fraction of guides were efficient in this window—85% of guides within 200 bp upstream of the TSS achieved as least 25% of the maximal activation of a given gene. This simple finding can be used to inform the selection of efficient sgRNAs for gene activation.

Transcriptional Activation of lincRNAs

Long intergenic noncoding RNAs (lincRNAs) are a class of non-protein-coding transcripts longer than 200 bp²⁶. While numerous lincRNAs have been identified by transcriptome sequencing, most of these molecules lack functional characterization. Nonetheless, some have so far been shown to play crucial roles in epigenetic regulation, cancer, and development²⁷. Targeted activation of these transcripts would be a valuable tool for revealing their biological significance. To test whether SAM is able to activate lincRNAs, 3 targets with known functions (TINCR²⁸, HOTTIP²⁹, and PCAT³⁰) and 3 with unknown functions (LINC00925, LINC00514 and LINC00028) were chosen. Similar to previous mRNA up-regulation experiments, RefSeq annotations were used to select 8 sgRNA target sites from the proximal promoter (˜800 bp to +1) of each lincRNA. SAM indeed mediated significant up-regulation of lincRNA transcripts from 3-fold up-regulation of PCAT to 360-fold up-regulation of LINC00514 (FIG. 66 a ). Interestingly, and in contrast to mRNA data, no significant correlation between the distance of lincRNA-targeted guides to the TSS and fold activation was found (FIG. 66 b ). Possibly, this discrepancy could arise from the complex isoform structure of non-coding transcripts—the targets all have at least 2 isoforms with a different TSS reported³¹.

In order to find an effective activation domain for lincRNAs, the efficacy of different transactivator components was compared. A comparison of MS2 fusions to VP64 alone, p65 alone, p65-HSF1, and p65-MyoD1 for each of the 48 lincRNA-targeting guides was conducted (FIG. 72 ). Triple domain SAMs, dCas9-VP64 coupled with MS2-p65-HSF1 or MS2-p65-MyoD1, led to significantly higher activation than the dual domain SAM (dCas9-VP64 with MS2-P65) for the best guides for all 6 lincRNAs (p<0.01). Single domain SAM, dCas9-VP64 with MS2-VP64, performed worst for all 6 lincRNAs, suggesting that activation with a complex of synergistic domains may be important for efficient artificial up-regulation of non-coding RNAs based on the domains tested.

SAM Mediates Simultaneous Activation of Multiple Genes

In order to study the complexity of gene network and transcription regulation, tools for simultaneous modulation of gene expression at multiple loci are needed. This would enable targeting of multiple elements of a signaling pathway or sets of genes that coordinate signaling in disease states. To that end, it was sought to test whether SAM can activate multiple genes simultaneously, and characterize factors impacting multiplexing performance. Simultaneous activation of three sets of 2, 4, 6 or 8 genes and one set of 10 genes was tested (FIG. 73 ) by co-expressing combinations of sgRNAs. Successful activation of all genes (>2-fold) for all gene combinations tested, including simultaneous activation of 10 genes was observed (FIGS. 67 a and 67 b ). Most genes (excluding ILIR2) exhibited a drop in the amount of up-regulation achieved when concurrently targeted with 9 other genes (FIGS. 67 a and 67 b ). Interestingly, the relative activation levels of each gene changed between multiplex activation and single-gene activation experiments. For example, whereas NANOG ranked 5th among the 10 targeted genes during single-gene activation, it ranked 10th in the 10-plex activation experiment. Some genes showed no change or only a modest and gradual drop in activation when concurrently targeted alongside an increasing number of genes (e.g. ILIR2, MYOD1, ASCL1). Others, however, displayed a steep decrease in up-regulation when combined with even a single gene partner (e.g. LIN28A, IL1B, NANOG). These distinct behaviours between genes were observed generally, across different gene pairings (FIG. 73 ).

It was evaluated whether reduced activation of targets during multiplexing of 10 genes was due to the reduced amounts of sgRNA or SAM protein components available per gene. Surprisingly, diluting the sgRNA expression plasmid by 10-fold in single-gene activation experiments did not reduce activation for all genes (FIG. 67 d ). For example, activation for 4 out of 10 genes (ILIR2, KLF4, ASCL1, and MYOD1) increased by an average of 90% with 10× dilution of sgRNA expression plasmid. The remaining 6 genes were decreased by an average of 51%. Genes whose activation was reduced as a result of sgRNA dilution were also dampened by multiplexing (FIG. 67 e ; r=0.94, p<0.001).

The activation efficiency of SAM was generally stable to dilution of its protein components (dCas9-VP64 and MS2-p65-HSF1). Reducing the amount of expression plasmids for both components by 10-fold led to an average drop of 26% in activation efficiency (FIG. 74 a ). Activation efficiency was particularly stable when all three components (including sgRNA) were diluted, retaining on average 100% activation efficiency across a 50-fold dilution range (FIG. 74 b ). The finding that SAM is highly efficient even at low transfection concentrations was particularly promising for application in genome-scale pooled screens, which rely on single copy lentiviral integration.

Development of a Genome-Scale Pooled Transcription Activation Screen

The ability to activate target genes using a single sgRNA opens the possibility of conducting pooled genome-scale pooled transcription activation screening. As a first step towards developing a SAM-based screen, all three components were cloned into lentiviral vectors (FIG. 68 a ). Each vector encodes a unique selection marker (Blast, Hygro, and Zeocin or Puromycin) to enable selection of cells co-expressing all three SAM components. To assess the efficiency of SAM when delivered via lentivirus at low multiplicity of infection (MOI), three validated genes were targeted: MYC, which is weakly activated; and KLF4 and MYOD1, which are only moderately activated. HEK293FT cells were co-transduced with lenti-dCas9-VP64 and lenti-MS2-p65-HSF1 at MOI <1 and concurrently selected with Blast and Hygro for 7 days. dCas9-VP65- and MS2-p65-HSF1-expressing cells were then transduced with lentiviral sgRNA vectors (lenti-sgRNA) at low MOI (<0.2) and selected for successfully transduced cells using either Puromycin or Zeocin. Target gene expression levels were measured four days post-transduction. All three genes were efficiently upregulated to levels comparable (MYOD1) or greater than those observed after transient SAM transfection (MYC and KLF4). Notably, expression levels achieved with Puromycin or Zeocin resistance markers on the sgRNA construct were not equal (FIG. 68 b ).

Having validated lentiSAM constructs (lenti-dCas9-VP64, lenti-MS2-p65-HSF1, and lenti-sgRNA), a genome-scale sgRNA library targeting every coding isoform from the RefSeq database (23430 isoforms) was designed. 3 sgRNA per isoform were designed and target sites within 200 bp upstream of the TSS, which was previously determined to provide more efficient activation (FIG. 65 d ), were chosen. The final library contained 70,290 guides, and two separate libraries with Zeocin (lenti-sgRNA-Zeo) or Puromycin (lenti-sgRNA-Puro) resistance were generated. As gene activation can have both a negative and positive effect on proliferation and cell survival a genome-wide screen for effectors of cellular growth was conducated. A polyclonal A375 melanoma cell line constitutively expressing both dCas9-VP64 and MS2-p65-HSF1 components was generated and these cells were transduced with a genome-scale lenti-sgRNA-Zeo library at a MOI of 0.2 (FIG. 68 c ). Genomic DNA was extracted 3 and 21 days after transduction by the sgRNA lentivirus, and guide counts were determined by NGS. Log₂ normalized guide counts for these two timepoints were compared. As expected for a population under selection, the distribution of guide counts displayed increased variance after 21 days in culture, with a large fraction of guides exhibiting depletion (FIG. 68 d ) (Wilcoxon rank sum test, p<0.0001). Enrichment of functional gene categories for the top 1000 depleted sgRNAs was analyzed, as well as the top 1000 depleted genes (determined based on the average depletion of all three guides targeted to a given gene), using Ingenuity pathway analysis. Categories with p<0.01 after Benjamini-Hochberg FDR correction are shown in FIG. 68 e . Enrichment for cancer and pluripotency related gene categories (including PTEN³² and STAT³³ signaling pathways, which have been implicated in cancer regulation) was observed. These results suggest that dysregulation of members of these gene categories may negatively impact melanoma proliferation and that SAM can be used for depletion screening.

Using Genome-Scale Transcription Activation Screen to Identify Genes Involved in BRAF Inhibitor Resistance

Previously it has been demonstrated that genome-scale screening using Cas9-mediated gene knockout can facilitate the identification of loss-of-function mutations that confer BRAF inhibitor resistance in a cell line model of melanoma¹⁴. The complementary genome-scale transcription activation screen using SAM would enable the identification of gain-of-function perturbations involved in melanoma drug resistance. To test the efficiency of SAM for genome-wide positive selection screening one aim was to identify genes implicated in the development of BRAF inhibitor resistance in BRAF^(V600E) mutant melanoma. The A375 melanoma cell line harbors the BRAF^(V600E) mutation and is naturally sensitive to BRAF inhibitors such as PLX4720 (PLX) and the closely related commercial therapeutic Vemurafenib. Cells harboring sgRNAs that activate genes leading to PLX resistance should therefore be enriched after continued culture in the presence of the drug, whereas no such effect should be observed in cells treated with vehicle only. Normalized guide counts for the input sgRNA-zeo library at the baseline time point (3 days post infection) as well as 14 days post treatment with either PLX or vehicle were analyzed. The sgRNA distribution was significantly different between cells treated with PLX and vehicle for two independent infection replicate screens, with the majority of sgRNAs exhibiting a reduced representation and a small set of guides showing high enrichment for PLX treated cells (Wilcoxon rank sum test, P<0.0001, median −1.3 for PLX vs. DMSO)(FIG. 69 a ).

For a number of gene targets, several sgRNAs for the same gene were enriched in PLX-treated cells (FIG. 69 b ), suggesting the importance of these genes for the formation of PLX resistance. To determine genes exhibiting consistently high enrichment across multiple sgRNAs, the RNAi Gene Enrichment Ranking (RIGER) algorithm (FIG. 69 c ) was employed. The 10 most significant hits were distributed throughout the genome (FIG. 69 c ). 50% of the top 20 RIGER hits were replicated in a validation screen using puro selection, rather than zeo, on the sgRNA library (FIG. 75 ). The significance of the p-values of the top 100 RIGER hits was comparable to those observed for GeCKO screening¹⁴, indicating that the results obtained from the SAM gain-of-function activation screen have similar statistical power compared to Cas9 nuclease-based knockout screening (FIG. 69 d ). In addition, for the top 10 shared hits between zeo and puro screens, the fraction of effectively enriched guides per gene (present in the top 5% of all guides) was very high with 97% for zeo and 81% for puro (89%±10.7% overall, compared to 78% 27% for the top 10 GECKO hits, FIG. 69 e ).

Ectopic expression of the top hit from both screens—EGFR—was previously shown to cause PLX resistance in tumor types harboring BRAF^(V600E) mutations by activating AKT in a pathway parallel to BRAF³⁴. In addition, patient-derived BRAF mutant melanomas were sensitized to PLX when treated with EGFR and AKT inhibitors³⁵. Furthermore, four out of the top 10 hits from the first screen belong to the family of G protein-coupled receptors (GPR35, LPAR1, LPAR5, and P2RY8). GPCR also emerged as the top-ranked protein class conferring resistance to multiple MAP kinase inhibitors in melanoma cells in a recent screen using cDNA overexpression by Johannessen et al. GPR35 and LPAR1 have previously been found to mediate PLX resistance in A375 cells when overexpressed via cDNA-. GPR35, LPAR1 and LPAR5 share Ga13 as a downstream target^(37,38) and induce cell proliferation through the ERK/GSK33/3-catenin pathway, leading to a growth advantage in multiple cancer types^(39,40). Although the exact molecular mechanism for P2RY8 action has not been identified, P2RY8 is abundantly expressed in leukemia cells⁴¹. Overexpression of P2RY8 in NIH3T3 cells with cDNA led to increased CREB, Elk-1, c-Fos, and c-Myc activity, suggesting that P2RY8, may evoke cell proliferation through the ERK pathway⁴¹. RAF-independent activation of ERK has previously been shown as a resistance mechanism to BRAF inhibitors⁴². A second family of proteins present in the top 20 hits of both screens are Rho guanine nucleotide exchange factors (ARHGEF1 and ARHGEF2) which also act on Gα13, downstream of GPCR. The activation of the GPCR pathway was shown to act as an independent mechanism for resistance to BRAF inhibition therapy through cAMP/PKA-mediated activation of transcription through CREB and ATF1³⁶. While only two of the top hits (GPR35 and LPAR1) overlap with the top hits from the Johannessen screen³⁶, many novel members of the GPCR pathway enriched in the top hits were in agreement with a model where GPCR pathway activation can mediate resistance to MAPK pathway inhibitors. Additionally, top hits include multiple integrin genes (ITGA9, ITGB3, and ITGB5) that have roles in tumorigenesis and malignancy. Particularly, all three integrin hits are capable of driving MAPK signaling and promoting malignancy, anchorage independence, and migration in melanoma and various carcinomas⁴³⁻⁴⁶. Additionally, ITGB3 is capable of driving cancerous cells towards a stem-like state through NF-κB pathway activation, which has been shown to mediate resistance to BRAF-inhibition therapy⁴⁷ (FIG. 69 f ). Therefore, these integrin top hits may play a role in circumventing BRAF inhibition by activating accessory pathways known to promote resistance and re-activate the MAPK downstream of RAF to promote malignancy.

To verify the biological relevance of the top hits from the genome-wide screen, a collection of gene expression data from BRAF^(v600)-mutant melanoma cell lines in the Cancer Cell Line Encyclopedia (CCLE)⁴⁸, short-term cultures of patient tumors⁴⁹, and a collection of primary and metastatic patient melanoma samples from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) (tcga-data.nci.nih.gov/tcga/) was examined. As shown previously⁴⁷, a distinct transcriptional state defines BRAF-inhibition sensitivity/resistance where sensitive and resistant states are described by activation of endogenous MITF/associated markers (e.g. PMEL) and NF-κB-pathway activity/associated markers (e.g. AXL), respectively (FIG. 6 f ). Using gene expression profiles from 29 melanoma short-term cultures, it was found that top genes from the SAM screen were significantly co-expressed within the resistant state and that a gene expression signature representing the top hits was predictive of this BRAF-inhibitor resistant transcriptional state (FIG. 69 f, p<0.0001 for overlapping hits from zeo and puro screens).

The expression of the top hits in 27 BRAF^(V600)-mutant melanoma cell lines from CCLE for which gene expression and pharmacological data were available was additionally investigated. The gene expression of the top hits from the activation screen are enriched and significantly associated with resistance to BRAF-inhibition (PLX4720) as is the top-hit signature from the SAM screens (FIG. 77 ; p=0.007 for overlapping hits from zeo and puro screens). To confirm that the top hits were representative of a resistant state in vivo, gene expression data from 113 primary and metastatic melanoma samples from TCGA (FIG. 78 ) was analyzed. The same gene and signature markers as described above was used to define sensitive and resistant transcriptional states and found that top hits and signatures from the SAM screens were significantly associated with a BRAF-inhibitor resistant phenotype (FIG. 78 , p<0.0001 for both zeo and puro screens). Thus, both in vitro (short-term cultures of patient melanoma samples and a panel of established melanoma cell lines) and in vivo (TCGA), the hits expand the understanding of the transcriptional state associated with BRAF-inhibition resistance with potentially novel therapeutic targets.

In summary, a structure-guided approach has been taken to design a dCas9-based transcription activation system for achieving robust, single sgRNA-mediated gene up-regulation. By engineering the sgRNA to incorporate protein-interacting aptamers, a synthetic transcription activation complex consisting of multiple distinct effector domains that more closely mimic natural transcription activation processes was assembled. Additional developments may be able to take advantage of the modularity and customizability of the sgRNA scaffold to establish a series of sgRNA scaffolds with different aptamers for recruiting distinct types of effectors. For instance, replacement of the MS2 stem-loops with PP7-interacting stem-loops may be used to recruit transcription repression elements.

The exemplary steps toward defining selection rules for potent sgRNAs provided in this example allows one skilled in the art to reveal additional selection criteria, such as sequence-intrinsic properties (FIG. 79 ), that are useful for guide efficacy.

Further characterization and improved understanding of the targeting specificity will also be useful for continued utility of Cas9 or SAM. Recent analysis of genome-wide dCas9-binding revealed significant concentration-dependent off-target binding⁵⁰.

Application of the Cas9 transcription activation complex, either in the context of individual gene perturbation or as genome-scale gene activation libraries, further allows for the dissection of many types of genetic elements, ranging from protein-coding genes to non-coding lincRNA elements. Furthermore, combining SAM with Cas9 mediated genome editing or dCas9-mediated gene repression allows for powerful approaches for studying gene interactions in diverse biological processes in contexts spanning from development and regeneration to many diseases.

Transient transfection experiments: Neuro-2a cells (Sigma-Aldrich) were grown in media containing 1:1 ratio of OptiMEM (Life Technologies) to high-glucose DMEM with GlutaMax and sodium pyruvate (Life Technologies) supplemented with 5% HyClone heat-inactivated FBS (Thermo Scientific), 1% penicillin/streptomycin (Life Technologies), and passaged at 1:5 every 2 days.

HEK293FT cells (Life Technologies) were maintained in high-glucose DMEM with GlutaMax and sodium pyruvate (Life Technologies) supplemented with 10% heat-inactivated characterized HyClone fetal bovine serum (Thermo Scientific) and 1% penicillin/streptomycin (Life Technologies). Cells were passaged daily at a ratio 1:2 or 1:2.5. For gene activation experiments, 20,000 HEK293FT cells/well were plated in 100 μL media in poly-D-lysine coated 96-well plates (BD BioSciences). 24 hours after plating, cells were transfected with a 1:1:1 mass ratio of:

-   -   sgRNA plasmid with gene-specific targeting sequence or pUC19         control plasmid     -   MS2-effector plasmid or pUC19.     -   dCas9 plasmid, dCas9-effector plasmid, or pUC19.         A total plasmid mass of 0.3 ug/well was transfected using 1.5         uL/well Lipofectamine 2000 (Life Technologies) according to the         manufacturer's instructions. Culture medium was changed 5 hours         after transfection. 48 hours after transfection, cell lysis and         reverse transcription were performed using a Cells-to-Ct kit         (Life Technologies). Relative RNA expression levels were         quantified by reverse transcription and quantitative PCR (qPCR)         using Taqman qPCR probes (Life technologies) and Fast Advanced         Master Mix (Life Technologies). qPCR was carried out in 5 uL         multiplexed reactions and 384-well format using the LightCycler         480 Instrument II. Data was analyzed by the ΔΔC_(t) method:         target Ct values (FAM dye) were normalized to GAPDH Ct values         (VIC dye), and fold changes in target gene expression were         determined by comparing to GFP-transfected experimental         controls.

Lentivirus production: HEK293T cells (Life Technologies) were cultured as described above for HEK293FT cells. 1 day prior to transfection, cells were seeded at ˜40% confluency (12 T225 flasks for library scale production, 1 T75 flask for individual guide production). Cells were transfected the next day at ˜80-90% confluency. For each flask, 20 ug of plasmid containing the vector of interest, 10 ug of pVSVG, and 15 ug of psPAX2 (Addgene) were transfected using 100 uL of Lipofectamine 2000 and 200 uL Plus Reagent (Life Technologies). 5 h after transfection the media was changed. Virus supernatant was harvested 48 h post-transfection, filtered with a 0.45 m PVDF filter (Millipore), aliquoted, and stored at −80° C.

Lentiviral transduction: A375 cells (ATCC) were cultured in RPMI 1640 (Life Technologies) supplemented with 10% FBS (Seradigm) and 1% penicillin/streptomycin (Life Technologies) and passaged every other day at a 1:4 ratio. Cells were transduced with lentivirus via spinfection in 12-well plates. 3×10⁶ cells in 2 mL of media supplemented with 8 ug/mL polybrene (Sigma) were added to each well, supplemented with lentiviral supernatant and centrifuged for 2 h at 1000 g. 24 h after spinfection, cells were detached with TrypLE (Life Technologies) and counted. Cells were replated at low density (7.5×10⁶ cells per T225 Flask) and a selection agent was added either immediately (zeocin, blasticidin and hygromycin, all Life technologies) or 3 h after plating (puromycin). Concentrations for selection agents were determined using a kill curve: 0.5 ug/ml puromycin, 200 ug/mL zeocin, 2 ug/mL blasticidin, and 300 ug/mL hygromycin. Media was refreshed on day 2 and cells were passaged every other day starting on day 4 after replating. The duration of selection was 4 days for puromycin and 7 days for zeocin, hygromycin and blasticidin. Lentiviral titers were determined by spinfecting cells with 6 different volumes of lentivirus ranging from 0 to 600 uL and counting the number of surviving cells after a complete selection (3-6 days).

Design and Cloning of SAM library: RefSeq coding gene isoforms with a unique TSS (total of 23430 isoforms) were targeted with three guides each for a total library of 70300 guides. Guides were designed to target the first 200 bp upstream of each TSS and subsequently filtered for GC content >25% and minimal overlap of the target sequence. After filtering, the remaining guides were scored according to predicted off-target matches based on Hsu et al. and three guides with the best off-target scores were selected. Cloning of the SAM sgRNA libraries was performed as previously described¹⁴ with a minimal representation of 100 transformed colonies/guide.

Depletion and PLX Screen: A375 cells stably integrated with SAM Cas9 and effector components were transduced with SAM sgRNA libraries as described above at an MOI of 0.2, with a minimal representation of 500 transduced cells/guide. Cells were maintained at >1000 cells/guide during subsequent passaging. At 7 DPI (complete selection, see above), cells were split into vehicle (DMSO) and PLX4720 conditions (2 uM PLX dissolved in DMSO, Selleckchem). Cells were passaged every 2 days for a total of 14 days of drug treatment. >1000 cells/guide were harvested as a baseline at 3 DPI (4 days before treatment) and at 21 DPI (after 14 days of treatment) for gDNA extraction. Genomic DNA was extracted using the Zymo Quick-gDNA midi kit (Zymo Research). PCR of the virally integrated guides was performed on gDNA at the equivalent of >500 cells/guide in 96 parallel reactions using NEBnext High Fidelity 2× Master Mix (New England Biolabs) in a single-step reaction of 22 cycles. Primers are listed below:

forward primer: (SEQ ID NO: 223) AATGATACGGCGACCACCGAGATCTACACTCTTTCCCTACACGACGCTC TTCCGATCTNNNNNNNN(1-10 bp stagger)GCTTTATATATCTTG TGGAAAGGACGAAACACC 8 bp barcode indicated in red

reverse primer: (SEQ ID NO: 224) CAAGCAGAAGACGGCATACGAGATNNNNNNNNGTGACTGGAGTTCAGAC GTGTGCTCTTCCGATCTGCCAAGTTGATAACGGACTAGCCTT 8 bp index read barcode indicated in red

PCR products from all 96 reactions were pooled, purified using Zymo-Spin™ V with Reservoir (Zymo research) and gel extracted using the Zymoclean™ Gel DNA Recovery Kit (Zymo research). Resulting libraries were deep-sequenced on Illumina Miseq and Hiseq platforms with a total coverage of >35 million reads passing filter per library.

NGS and screen hits analysis: NGS data were demultiplexed using unique index reads. Guide counts were determined based on perfectly-matched sequencing reads only. For each condition, guide counts were normalized to the total number of counts per condition, and log₂ counts were calculated based on these values. Ratios of counts between conditions were calculated as log₂((count 1+1)/(count 2+1)) based on normalized counts.

RIGER analysis was performed using GENE-E based on the normalized day 14 log 2 ratios (PLX/DMSO) averaged over two independent infection replicates. All RIGER analysis used the Kolmogorov-Smirnov method as described previously⁵¹, except for FIG. 6 c , where the weighed average method was used in order to enable comparison to GeCKO values determined by that method.

Gene expression and Pharmacological Validation Analysis: Gene expression data (CCLE, TCGA, short-term cultures) and pharmacological data (CCLE, short-term cultures) were analyzed to better understand the biological relevance of the top gene hits from the SAM screens. In the CCLE dataset⁴⁸, gene expression data (RNA-sequencing) and pharmacological data (activity area for MAPK pathway inhibitors) from BRAF^(V600) mutant melanoma cell lines were used to compute the association between PLX-4720 resistance and the gene expression of each of the top hits. Additionally, gene expression signatures comprised of the top hits were generated using single-sample Gene Set Enrichment Analysis (ssGSEA)^(52,53), and the associations between PLX-4720 resistance and these signatures were computed.

Gene expression data (Affymetrix GeneChip HT-HGU133) and PLX-4720 pharmacological data (GI₅₀; only for a subset of the samples) from short term melanoma cultures (STC)⁴⁹ was also used for plotting the gene expression of top hits and their ssGSEA signature scores. Expression data for the STC samples were collapsed to maximum probe value per gene and preprocessed using robust spline normalization.

Gene expression (RNA-sequencing) and genotyping data were collected from 113 BRAF^(V600)-mutant primary and metastatic patient tumors from The Cancer Genome Atlas (tcga-data.nci.nih.gov/tcga/) and this data was similarly used for determining the association between resistance and the expression of top hits/ssGSEA signature scores. Because pharmacological data was not available for the STCs (only a subset had PLX-4720 data) and the TCGA melanoma samples, a transcriptional state was plotted using marker genes and signatures⁴⁷ in order to identify which samples were resistant to BRAF-inhibition.

Single Sample Gene Set Enrichment Analysis: While there was a significant association between the overexpression of some of the top individual SAM screen hits and resistance in three external cancer datasets, a more robust scoring system independent of any single gene was sought. Gene expression signatures were generated based on the set of top hits from each of the two SAM screens and for the overlap between them. Using single-sample Gene Set Enrichment analysis (ssGSEA), a score was generated for each sample that represents the enrichment of the SAM screen gene expression signature in that sample and the extent to which those genes are coordinately up- or down-regulated. Additionally, signature gene sets from the Molecular Signature Database (MSigDB)⁵⁴ were used in order to fully map the transcriptional BRAF-inhibitor resistant/sensitive states in the short-term culture and TCGA datasets as previously described⁴⁷.

Information Coefficient for Measuring Associations in External Datasets: To measure correlations between different features (signature scores, gene expression, or drug-resistance data) in the external cancer datasets, an information-theoretic approach (Information Coefficient; IC) was used and significance was measured using a permutation test (n=10,000), as previously described⁴⁷. The IC was calculated between the feature used to sort the samples (columns) in each dataset and each of the features plotted in the heatmap (pharmacological data, gene expression, and signature scores).

sgRNA sequence analysis: Depletion for each sgRNA was calculated as the ratio of counts (see “NGS and screen hits analysis”) between day 3 and day 21. sgRNAs corresponding to genes with significant depletion (p<=0.05 by RIGER analysis) in sgRNA-puro and sgRNA-zeo libraries were selected for analyses. Selected sgRNA were counted for nucleotide occurrence in the sgRNA sequence, and for each nucleotide type, the correlation and significance with the sgRNA ratio of counts was calculated by Ordinary Least Squares linear regression.

REFERENCES (SPECIFIC TO EXAMPLE 20)

-   1 Berns, K. et al. A large-scale RNAi screen in human cells     identifies new components of the p53 pathway. Nature 428, 431-437,     doi:10.1038/nature02371 (2004). -   2 Boutros, M. et al. Genome-wide RNAi analysis of growth and     viability in Drosophila cells. Science 303, 832-835,     doi:10.1126/science.1091266 (2004). -   3 Horvath, P. & Barrangou, R. CRISPR/Cas, the immune system of     bacteria and archaea. Science 327, 167-170,     doi:10.1126/science.1179555 (2010). -   4 Beerli, R. R. & Barbas, C. F., 3rd. Engineering polydactyl     zinc-finger transcription factors. Nature biotechnology 20, 135-141,     doi:10.1038/nbt0202-135 (2002). -   5 Beerli, R. R., Segal, D. J., Dreier, B. & Barbas, C. F., 3rd.     Toward controlling gene expression at will: specific regulation of     the erbB-2/HER-2 promoter by using polydactyl zinc finger proteins     constructed from modular building blocks. Proceedings of the     National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 95,     14628-14633 (1998). -   6 Zhang, F. et al. Efficient construction of sequence-specific TAL     effectors for modulating mammalian transcription. Nature     biotechnology 29, 149-153, doi:10.1038/nbt.1775 (2011). -   7 Gilbert, L. A. et al. CRISPR-mediated modular RNA-guided     regulation of transcription in eukaryotes. Cell 154, 442-451,     doi:10.1016/j.cell.2013.06.044 (2013). -   8 Konermann, S. et al. Optical control of mammalian endogenous     transcription and epigenetic states. Nature 500, 472-476,     doi:10.1038/nature12466 (2013). -   9 Maeder, M. L. et al. Targeted DNA demethylation and activation of     endogenous genes using programmable TALE-TET1 fusion proteins.     Nature biotechnology 31, 1137-1142, doi:10.1038/nbt.2726 (2013). -   10 Maeder, M. L. et al. CRISPR RNA-guided activation of endogenous     human genes. Nature methods 10, 977-979, doi:10.1038/nmeth.2598     (2013). -   11 Mali, P. et al. CAS9 transcriptional activators for target     specificity screening and paired nickases for cooperative genome     engineering. Nature biotechnology 31, 833-838, doi:10.1038/nbt.2675     (2013). -   12 Perez-Pinera, P. et al. RNA-guided gene activation by     CRISPR-Cas9-based transcription factors. Nature methods 10, 973-976,     doi:10.1038/nmeth.2600 (2013). -   13 Perez-Pinera, P. et al. Synergistic and tunable human gene     activation by combinations of synthetic transcription factors.     Nature methods 10, 239-242, doi:10.1038/nmeth.2361 (2013). -   14 Shalem, O. et al. Genome-scale CRISPR-Cas9 knockout screening in     human cells. Science 343, 84-87, doi:10.1126/science.1247005 (2014). -   15 Wang, T., Wei, J. J., Sabatini, D. M. & Lander, E. S. Genetic     screens in human cells using the CRISPR-Cas9 system. Science 343,     80-84, doi:10.1126/science.1246981 (2014). -   16 Koike-Yusa, H., Li, Y., Tan, E. P., Velasco-Herrera Mdel, C. &     Yusa, K. Genome-wide recessive genetic screening in mammalian cells     with a lentiviral CRISPR-guide RNA library. Nature biotechnology 32,     267-273, doi:10.1038/nbt.2800 (2014). -   17 Nishimasu, H. et al. Crystal structure of Cas9 in complex with     guide RNA and target DNA. Cell 156, 935-949,     doi:10.1016/j.cell.2014.02.001 (2014). -   18 Peabody, D. S. The RNA binding site of bacteriophage MS2 coat     protein. The EMBO journal 12, 595-600 (1993). -   19 Auslander, S., Auslander, D., Muller, M., Wieland, M. &     Fussenegger, M. Programmable single-cell mammalian biocomputers.     Nature 487, 123-127, doi:10.1038/nature11149 (2012). -   20 Lemon, B. & Tjian, R. Orchestrated response: a symphony of     transcription factors for gene control. Genes & development 14,     2551-2569 (2000). -   21 van Essen, D., Engist, B., Natoli, G. & Saccani, S. Two modes of     transcriptional activation at native promoters by NF-kappaB p65.     PLoS biology 7, e73, doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.1000073 (2009). -   22 Kretzschmar, M., Kaiser, K., Lottspeich, F. & Meisterernst, M. A     novel mediator of class II gene transcription with homology to viral     immediate-early transcriptional regulators. Cell 78, 525-534 (1994). -   23 Ikeda, K., Stuehler, T. & Meisterernst, M. The H1 and H2 regions     of the activation domain of herpes simplex virion protein 16     stimulate transcription through distinct molecular mechanisms. Genes     to cells: devoted to molecular & cellular mechanisms 7, 49-58     (2002). -   24 Neely, K. E. et al. Activation domain-mediated targeting of the     SWI/SNF complex to promoters stimulates transcription from     nucleosome arrays. Molecular cell 4, 649-655 (1999). -   25 Weintraub, H. et al. Muscle-specific transcriptional activation     by MyoD. Genes & development 5, 1377-1386 (1991). -   26 Cech, T. R. & Steitz, J. A. The noncoding RNA revolution-trashing     old rules to forge new ones. Cell 157, 77-94,     doi:10.1016/j.cell.2014.03.008 (2014). -   27 Engreitz, J. M. et al. The Xist lncRNA exploits three-dimensional     genome architecture to spread across the X chromosome. Science 341,     1237973, doi:10.1126/science.1237973 (2013). -   28 Kretz, M. et al. Control of somatic tissue differentiation by the     long non-coding RNA TINCR. Nature 493, 231-235, doi:10.1038/naturel     1661 (2013). -   29 Wang, K. C. et al. A long noncoding RNA maintains active     chromatin to coordinate homeotic gene expression. Nature 472,     120-124, doi:10.1038/nature09819 (2011). -   30 Prensner, J. R. et al. Transcriptome sequencing across a prostate     cancer cohort identifies PCAT-1, an unannotated lincRNA implicated     in disease progression. Nature biotechnology 29, 742-749,     doi:10.1038/nbt.1914 (2011). -   31 Cabili, M. N. et al. Integrative annotation of human large     intergenic noncoding RNAs reveals global properties and specific     subclasses. Genes & development 25, 1915-1927,     doi:10.1101/gad.17446611 (2011). -   32 Li, J. et al. PTEN, a putative protein tyrosine phosphatase gene     mutated in human brain, breast, and prostate cancer. Science 275,     1943-1947 (1997). -   33 Bowman, T. et al. Stat3-mediated Myc expression is required for     Src transformation and PDGF-induced mitogenesis. Proceedings of the     National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 98,     7319-7324, doi:10.1073/pnas.131568898 (2001). -   34 Prahallad, A. et al. Unresponsiveness of colon cancer to     BRAF(V600E) inhibition through feedback activation of EGFR. Nature     483, 100-103, doi:10.1038/nature10868 (2012). -   35 Held, M. A. et al. Genotype-selective combination therapies for     melanoma identified by high-throughput drug screening. Cancer     discovery 3, 52-67, doi:10.1158/2159-8290.CD-12-0408 (2013). -   36 Johannessen, C. M. et al. A melanocyte lineage program confers     resistance to MAP kinase pathway inhibition. Nature 504, 138-142,     doi:10.1038/nature12688 (2013). -   37 Jenkins, L. et al. Agonist activation of the G protein-coupled     receptor GPR35 involves transmembrane domain III and is transduced     via Galpha(1)(3) and beta-arrestin-2. British journal of     pharmacology 162, 733-748, doi:10.1111/j.1476-5381.2010.01082.x     (2011). -   38 Choi, J. W. et al. LPA receptors: subtypes and biological     actions. Annual review of pharmacology and toxicology 50, 157-186,     doi:10.1146/annurev.pharmtox.010909.105753 (2010). -   39 Kumar, S. A. et al. Lysophosphatidic acid receptor expression in     chronic lymphocytic leukemia leads to cell survival mediated though     vascular endothelial growth factor expression. Leukemia & lymphoma     50, 2038-2048, doi:10.3109/10428190903275586 (2009). -   40 Okabe, K. et al. Possible involvement of lysophosphatidic acid     receptor-5 gene in the acquisition of growth advantage of rat tumor     cells. Molecular carcinogenesis 50, 635-642, doi:10.1002/mc.20750     (2011). -   41 Fujiwara, S. et al. Transforming activity of purinergic receptor     P2Y, G protein coupled, 8 revealed by retroviral expression     screening. Leukemia & lymphoma 48, 978-986,     doi:10.1080/10428190701225882 (2007). -   42 Johannessen, C. M. et al. COT drives resistance to RAF inhibition     through MAP kinase pathway reactivation. Nature 468, 968-972,     doi:10.1038/nature09627 (2010). -   43 Gupta, S. K., Oommen, S., Aubry, M. C., Williams, B. P. &     Vlahakis, N. E. Integrin alpha9beta1 promotes malignant tumor growth     and metastasis by potentiating epithelial-mesenchymal transition.     Oncogene 32, 141-150, doi:10.1038/onc.2012.41 (2013). -   44 Bao, W. & Stromblad, S. Integrin alphav-mediated inactivation of     p53 controls a MEK1-dependent melanoma cell survival pathway in     three-dimensional collagen. The Journal of cell biology 167,     745-756, doi:10.1083/jcb.200404018 (2004). -   45 Desgrosellier, J. S. & Cheresh, D. A. Integrins in cancer:     biological implications and therapeutic opportunities. Nature     reviews. Cancer 10, 9-22, doi:10.1038/nrc2748 (2010). -   46 Seguin, L. et al. An integrin beta(3)-KRAS-RalB complex drives     tumour stemness and resistance to EGFR inhibition. Nature cell     biology 16, 457-468, doi:10.1038/ncb2953 (2014). -   47 Konieczkowski, D. J. et al. A melanoma cell state distinction     influences sensitivity to MAPK pathway inhibitors. Cancer discovery     4, 816-827, doi:10.1158/2159-8290.CD-13-0424 (2014). -   48 Barretina, J. et al. The Cancer Cell Line Encyclopedia enables     predictive modelling of anticancer drug sensitivity. Nature 483,     603-607, doi:10.1038/nature11003 (2012). -   49 Lin, W. M. et al. Modeling genomic diversity and tumor dependency     in malignant melanoma. Cancer research 68, 664-673,     doi:10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-07-2615 (2008). -   50 Wu, X. et al. Genome-wide binding of the CRISPR endonuclease Cas9     in mammalian cells. Nature biotechnology 32, 670-676,     doi:10.1038/nbt.2889 (2014). -   51 Luo, B. et al. Highly parallel identification of essential genes     in cancer cells. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of     the United States of America 105, 20380-20385,     doi:10.1073/pnas.0810485105 (2008). -   52 Subramanian, A. et al. Gene set enrichment analysis: a     knowledge-based approach for interpreting genome-wide expression     profiles. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the     United States of America 102, 15545-15550,     doi:10.1073/pnas.0506580102 (2005). -   53 Barbie, D. A. et al. Systematic RNA interference reveals that     oncogenic KRAS-driven cancers require TBK1. Nature 462, 108-112,     doi:10.1038/nature08460 (2009). -   54 Liberzon, A. et al. Molecular signatures database (MSigDB) 3.0.     Bioinformatics 27, 1739-1740, doi:10.1093/bioinformatics/btr260     (2011).

Example 21: Inducible Structural Design Activation Mediators Transgenic Mice

On the basis of Platt et al., Cell (2014), 159(2): 440-455, or PCT patent publications as herein cited, such as WO 2014/093622 (PCT/US2013/074667), an inducible structural design activation mediator transgenic mouse is established. A mouse engineered with the Lox-Stop-polyA-Lox(LSL) cassette upstream to the coding region of the SpCas9-VP64 fusion protein is established. A second mouse engineered with the Lox-Stop-polyA-Lox(LSL) cassette upstream to the coding region of the SpCas9-VP64 fusion protein and upstream to the coding region of the MS2-β65-HSF1 fusion protein is established.

Example 22: Screening for Gain of Function Phenotypes Using Inducible Structural Design Activation Mediators in Cells and Transgenic Mice

The mice established in Example 21 are transfected with a AAV-Cre construct coding for and expressing Cre (such as under the control of a U6 promoter) and also coding for and expressing modified sgRNA (such as U6-modified sgRNA), according to the present invention via AAV. sgRNAs are designed to target the promoter region within 1000 nucleotides upstream of the TTS of lincRNAs of unknown function. Animals are screened for aberrant phenotypes.

Human guides and mouse guides of PCT application designating, inter alia, the United States, application No. PCT/US14/41806, filed Jun. 10, 2014, and the applications in the lineage of this PCT application (i.e., guides in the applications as to which PCT/US14/41806 claims priority), all incorporated herein by reference, are modified to contain an activator as herein discussed, or a repressor as herein discussed.

Human cells containing or modified to constitutively express or inducibly express Cas9 are transfected with an AAV construct coding for human sgRNA of PCT application designating, inter alia, the United States, application No. PCT/US14/41806, filed Jun. 10, 2014, and the applications in the lineage of this PCT application (i.e., guides in the applications as to which PCT/US14/41806 claims priority), wherein the guides include either at least one repressor or at least one activator, in accordance with the herein discussion, under the control of and operably linked to a promoter, such as U6-modified sgRNA, according to the present invention; and in the case of such cells wherein the Cas9 is inducibly expressed, Cre induces expression and the construct also via AAV codes for and expresses Cre, such as by way of coding therefor operably linked to a U6 promoter. The cells as to which the sgRNA has a activator are monitored for Gain of Function and the cells as to which the sgRNA has a repressor are monitored for Loss of Function. The cells as to which the modified sgRNA has an activator show gain of function, and the cells as to which the modified sgRNA has a repressor show loss of function. In this fashion, human cells can be screened.

The Cas9 mouse of Example 21, Platt et al., Cell (2014), 159(2): 440-455, or PCT publications as herein cited, such as WO 2014/093622 (PCT/US2013/074667), and are transfected with a AAV-Cre construct coding for and expressing Cre (such as under the control of a U6 promoter) and also coding for and expressing modified mouse sgRNA (such as U6-modified sgRNA) of PCT application designating, inter alia, the United States, application No. PCT/US14/41806, filed Jun. 10, 2014, and the applications in the lineage of this PCT application (i.e., guides in the applications as to which PCT/US14/41806 claims priority), wherein the guides include either at least one repressor or at least one activator, in accordance with the herein disclosure. The mice as to which the sgRNA has a activator are monitored for Gain of Function and the mice as to which the sgRNA has a repressor are monitored for Loss of Function. The mice as to which the modified sgRNA has an activator show gain of function, and the mice as to which the modified sgRNA has a repressor show loss of function. In this fashion, mice can be screened.

In an aspect, the vector systems in the methods of the invention comprise one or more lentiviral vector(s). In a preferred embodiment, the one or more lentiviral vectors may comprise a codon optimized nuclear localization signal (NLS), a codon optimized β2A bicistronic linker sequence and an optimally placed U6 driven guide RNA cassette. In another aspect the vector system comprises two lentiviral vectors, wherein one lentiviral vector comprises the Cas9 enzyme and the other lentiviral vector comprises the guide RNA selected from the libraries of the invention. In an embodiment of the invention, each vector has a different selection marker, e.g. a different antibiotic resistance marker. The invention also comprehends kits comprising the libraries of the invention. In certain aspects, the kit comprises a single container comprising vectors comprising the library of the invention. In other aspects, the kit comprises a single container comprising plasmids comprising the library of the invention. The invention also comprehends kits comprising a panel comprising a selection of unique CRISPR-Cas system guide sequences from the library of the invention, wherein the selection is indicative of a particular physiological condition. In preferred embodiments, the targeting is of about 100 or more sequences, about 1000 or more sequences or about 20,000 or more sequences or the entire genome. In other embodiments a panel of target sequences is focused on a relevant or desirable pathway, such as an immune pathway or cell division.

Example 23: Paired Nickase Fok1

Paired CRISPR-Cas complexes having a mutated CRISPR enzyme whereby the CRISPR enzyme is “dead” (has at most 5% nuclease activity of non-mutated Cas9 or CRISPR enzyme), and a Fok1 nuclease is operably linked to sgRNA are delivered to cells, whereby in the pair, a first CRISPR-Cas complex makes a cut at a first loci in the cells and a second CRISPR-Cas complex makes cut at a second loci in the cells; the two Fok1 enzymes provide a double stranded break such as when the first and second loci are at or near each other but on different strands of double stranded DNA, whereby such that the CRISPR-Cas complex(es) provide(s) a particular specific cut or double stranded cut, and the CRISPR-Cas complexes have a greater reduction in off-target cutting, than unmodified CRISPR-Cas complexes. The paired CRISPR-Cas9 complexes can cut the two strands of double stranded DNA such that HDR can occur. In embodiments template DNA is introduced into the cells whereby there is homologous recombination inserting the template DNA where the double stranded cut has been made.

Example 24: Three-Component Chimeric Cas9 Enzymes

Chimeric Cas9 enzymes were constructed and tested. The Chimeric enzymes had N′ and C′ terminal domains from Sp Cas9, but internal domains were swapped out for Sa or St3 domains to provide Sp-St3-Sp or Sp-Sa-Sp chimeric 3 component enzymes.

A range of guides were tested with each chimeric enzyme. The guides were either pure Sp, Sa or St3 wildtype, or they were engineered such that they were hybrids of Sp with Sa or St3. Where the enzyme included one or more St3 internal domains to form an Sp-St3-Sp chimeric 3-component enzyme, the hybrid guides comprised either: an Sp BackBone (BB) and an St3 Targeting Sequence (TGS); or an St3 BackBone (BB) and an Sp Targeting Sequence (TGS). Where one or more Sa internal domains were swapped in to form Sp-Sa-Sp chimeric 3-component enzyme, the guides were engineered to comprise either: an Sp BackBone (BB) and an Sa Targeting Sequence (TGS); or an Sa BackBone (BB) and an Sp Targeting Sequence (TGS). The BackBone comprises the sgRNA scaffold (or tracr sequence and tracr mate) and the Targeting Sequence consisted of the 20 bp spacer portion of the sgRNA (specific for the DNA target).

The domains swapped in or out were not necessarily complete domains in that they included full and partial domains. While complete swap of the Rec lobe is within the ambit of the instant invention, for illustrative purposes, this work focused on partial swaps of the Rec lobe. The Nuc lobe comprises the RuvCI domain, the RuvCII domain, the HNH domain, RuvCIII domain and the PI domain, whilst the Rec lobe comprises the BH, REC1 and REC2 domains.

Methods Cell Culture and Transfection

Human embryonic kidney (HEK) cell line 293FT (Life Technologies) or mouse Neuro 2a (Sigma-Aldrich) cell line was maintained in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's Medium (DMEM) supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum (HyClone), 2 mM GlutaMAX (Life Technologies), 100 U/mL penicillin, and 100 μg/mL streptomycin at 37° C. with 5% CO₂ incubation.

Cells were seeded onto 24-well plates (Corning) at a density of 120,000 cells/well, 24 hours prior to transfection. Cells were transfected using Lipofectamine 2000 (Life Technologies) at 80-90% confluency following the manufacturer's recommended protocol. A total of 500 ng Cas9 plasmid and 100 ng of U6-sgRNA PCR product was transfected.

SURVEYOR Nuclease Assay for Genome Modification

293FT and HUES62 cells were transfected with DNA as described above. Cells were incubated at 37° C. for 72 hours post-transfection prior to genomic DNA extraction. Genomic DNA was extracted using the QuickExtract DNA Extraction Solution (Epicentre) following the manufacturer's protocol. Briefly, pelleted cells were resuspended in QuickExtract solution and incubated at 65° C. for 15 minutes, 68° C. for 15 minutes, and 98° C. for 10 minutes.

The genomic region flanking the CRISPR target site for each gene was PCR amplified using primers as follows:

primer genomic name target primer sequence (5′ to 3′) SUV901 EMX1 CCATCCCCTTCTGTGAATGT (SEQ ID NO: 143) SUV902 EMX1 GGAGATTGGAGACACGGAGA (SEQ ID NO: 144)

Products were purified using QiaQuick Spin Column (Qiagen) following the manufacturer's protocol. 400 ng total of the purified PCR products were mixed with 2 microliters 10×Taq DNA Polymerase PCR buffer (Enzymatics) and ultrapure water to a final volume of 20 microliters, and subjected to a re-annealing process to enable heteroduplex formation: 95° C. for 10 min, 95° C. to 85° C. ramping at −2° C./s, 85° C. to 25° C. at −0.25° C./s, and 25° C. hold for 1 minute. After re-annealing, products were treated with SURVEYOR nuclease and SURVEYOR enhancer S (Transgenomics) following the manufacturer's recommended protocol, and analyzed on 4-20% Novex TBE poly-acrylamide gels (Life Technologies). Gels were stained with SYBR Gold DNA stain (Life Technologies) for 30 minutes and imaged with a Gel Doc gel imaging system (Bio-rad). Quantification was based on relative band intensities. Indel percentage was determined by the formula:

100×(1−(1−(b+c)/(a+b+c))^(1/2)),

where ‘a’ is the integrated intensity of the undigested PCR product, and ‘b’ and ‘c’ are the integrated intensities of each cleavage product.

Results

The helical domains, e.g., HD2 or Helical domain 2, discussed earlier herein, are initial annotations of the 1368 amino acid Sp Cas9 and current terminology also involves a Recognition or Rec lobe with three domains: REC1 (with reference to Sp Cas9 residues 94-179), REC2 (residues 180-307, with reference to Sp Cas9) and a long alpha helix referred to as the bridge helix (residues 60-93 with reference to Sp Cas9) (see Nishimasu et a). The results of this Example are shown in FIG. 86 . FIG. 86 shows testing of chimera between Sp, Sa and St3 Cas9 based on crystal structure. A) domain organization and amino acid (AA) positions of Sp Cas9. The REC lobe is a newly identified structural component of Cas9. B) Chimera maps of partial or complete swaps of the Nuc lobe, with AA positions of chimera boundaries indicated C) indel % achieved with each corresponding chimera on the left. Labels indicate the sgRNA used. TGS=targeting sequences (20 bp spacer portion of the sgRNA), BB=sgRNA backbone Applicants found that it is possible to construct chimera between different Cas9 proteins (originating from different species) that consist of at least three components, thereby enabling internal domains to be swapped out. Applicants illustrated this with swaps performed on the internal REC lobe of Cas9, which was newly identified based on the crystal structure provided herein.

While preferred embodiments of the present invention have been shown and described herein, it will be obvious to those skilled in the art that such embodiments are provided by way of example only. Numerous variations, changes, and substitutions will now occur to those skilled in the art without departing from the invention. It should be understood that various alternatives to the embodiments of the invention described herein may be employed in practicing the invention. It is intended that the following claims define the scope of the invention and that methods and structures within the scope of these claims and their equivalents be covered thereby.

REFERENCES

-   1. Urnov, F. D., Rebar, E. J., Holmes, M. C., Zhang, H. S. &     Gregory, P. D. Genome editing with engineered zinc finger nucleases.     Nat. Rev. Genet. 11, 636-646 (2010). -   2. Bogdanove, A. J. & Voytas, D. F. TAL effectors: customizable     proteins for DNA targeting. Science 333, 1843-1846 (2011). -   3. Stoddard, B. L. Homing endonuclease structure and function. Q.     Rev. Biophys. 38, 49-95 (2005). -   4. Bae, T. & Schneewind, O. Allelic replacement in Staphylococcus     aureus with inducible counter-selection. Plasmid 55, 58-63 (2006). -   5. Sung, C. K., Li, H., Claverys, J. P. & Morrison, D. A. An rpsL     cassette, janus, for gene replacement through negative selection in     Streptococcus pneumoniae. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 67, 5190-5196     (2001). -   6. Sharan, S. K., Thomason, L. C., Kuznetsov, S. G. & Court, D. L.     Recombineering: a homologous recombination-based method of genetic     engineering. Nat. Protoc. 4, 206-223 (2009). -   7. Jinek, M. et al. A programmable dual-RNA-guided DNA endonuclease     in adaptive bacterial immunity. Science 337, 816-821 (2012). -   8. Deveau, H., Garneau, J. E. & Moineau, S. CRISPR/Cas system and     its role in phage-bacteria interactions. Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 64,     475-493 (2010). -   9. Horvath, P. & Barrangou, R. CRISPR/Cas, the immune system of     bacteria and archaea. Science 327, 167-170 (2010). -   10. Terns, M. P. & Terns, R. M. CRISPR-based adaptive immune     systems. Curr. Opin. Microbiol. 14, 321-327 (2011). -   11. van der Oost, J., Jore, M. M., Westra, E. R., Lundgren, M. &     Brouns, S. J. CRISPR-based adaptive and heritable immunity in     prokaryotes. Trends. Biochem. Sci. 34, 401-407 (2009). -   12. Brouns, S. J. et al. Small CRISPR RNAs guide antiviral defense     in prokaryotes. Science 321, 960-964 (2008). -   13. Carte, J., Wang, R., Li, H., Terns, R. M. & Terns, M. P. Cas6 is     an endoribonuclease that generates guide RNAs for invader defense in     prokaryotes. Genes Dev. 22, 3489-3496 (2008). -   14. Deltcheva, E. et al. CRISPR RNA maturation by trans-encoded     small RNA and host factor RNase III. Nature 471, 602-607 (2011). -   15. Hatoum-Aslan, A., Maniv, I. & Marraffini, L. A. Mature     clustered, regularly interspaced, short palindromic repeats RNA     (crRNA) length is measured by a ruler mechanism anchored at the     precursor processing site. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 108,     21218-21222 (2011). -   16. Haurwitz, R. E., Jinek, M., Wiedenheft, B., Zhou, K. &     Doudna, J. A. Sequence- and structure-specific RNA processing by a     CRISPR endonuclease. Science 329, 1355-1358 (2010). -   17. Deveau, H. et al. Phage response to CRISPR-encoded resistance in     Streptococcus thermophilus. J. Bacteriol. 190, 1390-1400 (2008). -   18. Gasiunas, G., Barrangou, R., Horvath, P. & Siksnys, V.     Cas9-crRNA ribonucleoprotein complex mediates specific DNA cleavage     for adaptive immunity in bacteria. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A.     (2012). -   19. Makarova, K. S., Aravind, L., Wolf, Y. I. & Koonin, E. V.     Unification of Cas protein families and a simple scenario for the     origin and evolution of CRISPR-Cas systems. Biol. Direct. 6, 38     (2011). -   20. Barrangou, R. RNA-mediated programmable DNA cleavage. Nat.     Biotechnol. 30, 836-838 (2012). -   21. Brouns, S. J. Molecular biology. A Swiss army knife of immunity.     Science 337, 808-809 (2012). -   22. Carroll, D. A CRISPR Approach to Gene Targeting. Mol. Ther. 20,     1658-1660 (2012). -   23. Bikard, D., Hatoum-Aslan, A., Mucida, D. & Marraffini, L. A.     CRISPR interference can prevent natural transformation and virulence     acquisition during in vivo bacterial infection. Cell Host Microbe     12, 177-186 (2012). -   24. Sapranauskas, R. et al. The Streptococcus thermophilus     CRISPR/Cas system provides immunity in Escherichia coli. Nucleic     Acids Res. (2011). -   25. Semenova, E. et al. Interference by clustered regularly     interspaced short palindromic repeat (CRISPR) RNA is governed by a     seed sequence. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. (2011). -   26. Wiedenheft, B. et al. RNA-guided complex from a bacterial immune     system enhances target recognition through seed sequence     interactions. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. (2011). -   27. Zahner, D. & Hakenbeck, R. The Streptococcus pneumoniae     beta-galactosidase is a surface protein. J. Bacteriol. 182,     5919-5921 (2000). -   28. Marraffini, L. A., Dedent, A. C. & Schneewind, O. Sortases and     the art of anchoring proteins to the envelopes of gram-positive     bacteria. Microbiol. Mol. Biol. Rev. 70, 192-221 (2006). -   29. Motamedi, M. R., Szigety, S. K. & Rosenberg, S. M.     Double-strand-break repair recombination in Escherichia coli:     physical evidence for a DNA replication mechanism in vivo. Genes     Dev. 13, 2889-2903 (1999). -   30. Hosaka, T. et al. The novel mutation K87E in ribosomal protein     S12 enhances protein synthesis activity during the late growth phase     in Escherichia coli. Mol. Genet. Genomics 271, 317-324 (2004). -   31. Costantino, N. & Court, D. L. Enhanced levels of lambda     Red-mediated recombinants in mismatch repair mutants. Proc. Natl.     Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 100, 15748-15753 (2003). -   32. Edgar, R. & Qimron, U. The Escherichia coli CRISPR system     protects from lambda lysogenization, lysogens, and prophage     induction. J. Bacteriol. 192, 6291-6294 (2010). -   33. Marraffini, L. A. & Sontheimer, E. J. Self versus non-self     discrimination during CRISPR RNA-directed immunity. Nature 463,     568-571 (2010). -   34. Fischer, S. et al. An archaeal immune system can detect multiple     Protospacer Adjacent Motifs (PAMs) to target invader DNA. J. Biol.     Chem. 287, 33351-33363 (2012). -   35. Gudbergsdottir, S. et al. Dynamic properties of the Sulfolobus     CRISPR/Cas and CRISPR/Cmr systems when challenged with vector-borne     viral and plasmid genes and protospacers. Mol. Microbiol. 79, 35-49     (2011). -   36. Wang, H. H. et al. Genome-scale promoter engineering by     coselection MAGE. Nat Methods 9, 591-593 (2012). -   37. Cong L, Ran F A, Cox D, Lin S, Barretto R, Habib N, Hsu P D, Wu     X, Jiang W, Marraffini L A, Zhang F. Multiplex Genome Engineering     Using CRISPR/Cas Systems. Science. 2013 Feb. 15; 339(6121):819-23. -   38. Mali, P., Yang, L., Esvelt, K. M., Aach, J., Guell, M.,     DiCarlo, J. E., Norville, J. E., and Church, G. M. (2013b).     RNA-guided human genome engineering via Cas9. Science 339, 823-826. -   39. Hoskins, J. et al. Genome of the bacterium Streptococcus     pneumoniae strain R6. J. Bacteriol. 183, 5709-5717 (2001). -   40. Havarstein, L. S., Coomaraswamy, G. & Morrison, D. A. An     unmodified heptadecapeptide pheromone induces competence for genetic     transformation in Streptococcus pneumoniae. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci.     U.S.A. 92, 11140-11144 (1995). -   41. Horinouchi, S. & Weisblum, B. Nucleotide sequence and functional     map of pC194, a plasmid that specifies inducible chloramphenicol     resistance. J. Bacteriol. 150, 815-825 (1982). -   42. Horton, R. M. In Vitro Recombination and Mutagenesis of DNA:     SOEing Together Tailor-Made Genes. Methods Mol. Biol. 15, 251-261     (1993). -   43. Podbielski, A., Spellerberg, B., Woischnik, M., Pohl, B. &     Lutticken, R. Novel series of plasmid vectors for gene inactivation     and expression analysis in group A streptococci (GAS). Gene 177,     137-147 (1996). -   44. Husmann, L. K., Scott, J. R., Lindahl, G. & Stenberg, L.     Expression of the Arp protein, a member of the M protein family, is     not sufficient to inhibit phagocytosis of Streptococcus pyogenes.     Infection and immunity 63, 345-348 (1995). -   45. Gibson, D. G. et al. Enzymatic assembly of DNA molecules up to     several hundred kilobases. Nat Methods 6, 343-345 (2009). -   46. Garneau J. E. et al. The CRISPR/Cas bacterial immune system     cleaves bacteriophage and plasmid DNA. Nature 468, 67-71 (4 Nov.     2010) -   47. Barrangou R. et al. CRISPR provides acquired resistance against     viruses in prokaryotes. Science. 2007 Mar. 23; 315(5819):1709-12. -   48. Ishino Y. et al. Nucleotide sequence of the iap gene,     responsible for alkaline phosphatase isozyme conversion in     Escherichia coli, and identification of the gene product. J     Bacteriol. 1987 December; 169(12):5429-33. -   49. Mojica F. J. M et al. Biological significance of a family of     regularly spaced repeats in the genomes of Archaea, Bacteria and     mitochondria. Molecular Microbiology (2000) 36(1), 244-246. -   50. Jansen R. et al. Identification of genes that are associated     with DNA repeats in prokaryotes. Molecular Microbiology (2002)     43(6), 1565-1575. -   51. Gouet, P., Courcelle, E., Stuart, D. I., and Metoz, F. (1999).     ESPript: analysis of multiple sequence alignments in PostScript.     Bioinformatics 15, 305-308. -   52. Notredame, C., Higgins, D. G., and Heringa, J. (2000). T-Coffee:     A novel method for fast and accurate multiple sequence alignment. J     Mol Biol 302, 205-217. -   53. Adams, P. D., Grosse-Kunstleve, R. W., Hung, L. W., Ioerger, T.     R., McCoy, A. J., Moriarty, N. W., Read, R. J., Sacchettini, J. C.,     Sauter, N. K., and Terwilliger, T. C. (2002). PHENIX: building new     software for automated crystallographic structure determination.     Acta Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr 58, 1948-1954. -   54. Ariyoshi, M., Vassylyev, D. G., Iwasaki, H., Nakamura, H.,     Shinagawa, H., and Morikawa, K. (1994). Atomic structure of the RuvC     resolvase: a holiday junction-specific endonuclease from E. coli.     Cell 78, 1063-1072. -   55. Biertumpfel, C., Yang, W., and Suck, D. (2007). Crystal     structure of T4 endonuclease VII resolving a Holliday junction.     Nature 449, 616-620. -   56. Chen, L., Shi, K., Yin, Z., and Aihara, H. (2013). Structural     asymmetry in the Thermus thermophilus RuvC dimer suggests a basis     for sequential strand cleavages during Holliday junction resolution.     Nucleic acids research 41, 648-656. -   57. delaFortelle, E., and Bricogne, G. (1997). Maximum-likelihood     heavy-atom parameter refinement for multiple isomorphous replacement     and multiwavelength anomalous diffraction methods. Methods Enzymol     276, 472-494. -   58. Emsley, P., and Cowtan, K. (2004). Coot: model-building tools     for molecular graphics. Acta Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr 60,     2126-2132. -   59. Fonfara, I., Le Rhun, A., Chylinski, K., Makarova, K. S.,     Lecrivain, A. L., Bzdrenga, J., Koonin, E. V., and Charpentier, E.     (2013). Phylogeny of Cas9 determines functional exchangeability of     dual-RNA and Cas9 among orthologous type II CRISPR-Cas systems.     Nucleic acids research. -   60. Fu, Y., Foden, J. A., Khayter, C., Maeder, M. L., Reyon, D.,     Joung, J. K., and Sander, J. D. (2013). High-frequency off-target     mutagenesis induced by CRISPR-Cas nucleases in human cells. Nature     biotechnology 31, 822-826. -   61. Gilbert, L. A., Larson, M. H., Morsut, L., Liu, Z., Brar, G. A.,     Torres, S. E., Stern-Ginossar, N., Brandman, O., Whitehead, E. H.,     Doudna, J. A., et al. (2013). CRISPR-mediated modular RNA-guided     regulation of transcription in eukaryotes. Cell 154, 442-451. -   62. Gorecka, K. M., Komorowska, W., and Nowotny, M. (2013). Crystal     structure of RuvC resolvase in complex with Holliday junction     substrate. Nucleic Acids Res 41, 9945-9955. -   63. Gratz, S. J., Cummings, A. M., Nguyen, J. N., Hamm, D. C.,     Donohue, L. K., Harrison, M. M., Wildonger, J., and     O'Connor-Giles, K. M. (2013). Genome engineering of Drosophila with     the CRISPR RNA-guided Cas9 nuclease. Genetics 194, 1029-1035. -   64. Holm, L., and Rosenstrom, P. (2010). Dali server: conservation     mapping in 3D. Nucleic acids research 38, W545-549. -   65. Hsu, P. D., Scott, D. A., Weinstein, J. A., Ran, F. A.,     Konermann, S., Agarwala, V., Li, Y., Fine, E. J., Wu, X., Shalem,     O., et al. (2013). DNA targeting specificity of RNA-guided Cas9     nucleases. Nature biotechnology 31, 827-832. -   66. Hwang, W. Y., Fu, Y., Reyon, D., Maeder, M. L., Tsai, S. Q.,     Sander, J. D., Peterson, R. T., Yeh, J. R., and Joung, J. K. (2013).     Efficient genome editing in zebrafish using a CRISPR-Cas system.     Nature biotechnology 31, 227-229. -   67. Kabsch, W. (2010). Xds. Acta crystallographica Section D,     Biological crystallography 66, 125-132. -   68. Konermann, S., Brigham, M. D., Trevino, A. E., Hsu, P. D.,     Heidenreich, M., Cong, L., Platt, R. J., Scott, D. A., Church, G.     M., and Zhang, F. (2013). Optical control of mammalian endogenous     transcription and epigenetic states. Nature 500, 472-476. -   69. Li, C. L., Hor, L. I., Chang, Z. F., Tsai, L. C., Yang, W. Z.,     and Yuan, H. S. (2003). DNA binding and cleavage by the periplasmic     nuclease Vvn: a novel structure with a known active site. The EMBO     journal 22, 4014-4025. -   70. Maeder, M. L., Linder, S. J., Cascio, V. M., Fu, Y., Ho, Q. H.,     and Joung, J. K. (2013). CRISPR RNA-guided activation of endogenous     human genes. Nature methods 10, 977-979. -   71. Mali, P., Aach, J., Stranges, P. B., Esvelt, K. M., Moosburner,     M., Kosuri, S., Yang, L., and Church, G. M. (2013a). CAS9     transcriptional activators for target specificity screening and     paired nickases for cooperative genome engineering. Nature     biotechnology 31, 833-838. -   72. Marraffini, L. A., and Sontheimer, E. J. (2008). CRISPR     interference limits horizontal gene transfer in staphylococci by     targeting DNA. Science 322, 1843-1845. -   73. Marraffini, L. A., and Sontheimer, E. J. (2010). CRISPR     interference: RNA-directed adaptive immunity in bacteria and     archaea. Nat Rev Genet 11, 181-190. -   74. Mojica, F. J., Diez-Villasenor, C., Garcia-Martinez, J., and     Almendros, C. (2009). Short motif sequences determine the targets of     the prokaryotic CRISPR defence system. Microbiology 155, 733-740. -   75. Pattanayak, V., Lin, S., Guilinger, J. P., Ma, E., Doudna, J.     A., and Liu, D. R. (2013). High-throughput profiling of off-target     DNA cleavage reveals RNA-programmed Cas9 nuclease specificity.     Nature biotechnology 31, 839-843. -   76. Perez-Pinera, P., Kocak, D. D., Vockley, C. M., Adler, A. F.,     Kabadi, A. M., Polstein, L. R., Thakore, P. I., Glass, K. A.,     Ousterout, D. G., Leong, K. W., et al. (2013). RNA-guided gene     activation by CRISPR-Cas9-based transcription factors. Nature     methods 10, 973-976. -   77. Qi, L. S., Larson, M. H., Gilbert, L. A., Doudna, J. A.,     Weissman, J. S., Arkin, A. P., and Lim, W. A. (2013). Repurposing     CRISPR as an RNA-guided platform for sequence-specific control of     gene expression. Cell 152, 1173-1183. -   78. Ran, F. A., Hsu, P. D., Lin, C. Y., Gootenberg, J. S.,     Konermann, S., Trevino, A. E., Scott, D. A., Inoue, A., Matoba, S.,     Zhang, Y., et al. (2013). Double nicking by RNA-guided CRISPR Cas9     for enhanced genome editing specificity. Cell 154, 1380-1389. -   79. Sampson, T. R., Saroj, S. D., Llewellyn, A. C., Tzeng, Y. L.,     and Weiss, D. S. (2013). A CRISPR/Cas system mediates bacterial     innate immune evasion and virulence. Nature 497, 254-257. -   80. Shalem, O., Sanjana, N. E., Hartenian, E., Shi, X., Scott, D.     A., Mikkelsen, T. S., Heckl, D., Ebert, B. L., Root, D. E.,     Doench, J. G., et al. (2014). Genome-scale CRISPR-Cas9 knockout     screening in human cells. Science 343, 84-87. -   81. Sheldrick, G. M. (2008). A short history of SHELX. Acta     crystallographica Section A, Foundations of crystallography 64,     112-122. -   82. Spilman, M., Cocozaki, A., Hale, C., Shao, Y., Ramia, N., Terns,     R., Terns, M., Li, H., and Stagg, S. (2013). Structure of an RNA     silencing complex of the CRISPR-Cas immune system. Molecular cell     52, 146-152. -   83. Wang, H., Yang, H., Shivalila, C. S., Dawlaty, M. M., Cheng, A.     W., Zhang, F., and Jaenisch, R. (2013). One-step generation of mice     carrying mutations in multiple genes by CRISPR/Cas-mediated genome     engineering. Cell 153, 910-918. -   84. Wang, T., Wei, J. J., Sabatini, D. M., and Lander, E. S. (2014).     Genetic screens in human cells using the CRISPR-Cas9 system. Science     343, 80-84. -   85. Wiedenheft, B., Lander, G. C., Zhou, K., Jore, M. M., Brouns, S.     J., van der Oost, J., Doudna, J. A., and Nogales, E. (2011).     Structures of the RNA-guided surveillance complex from a bacterial     immune system. Nature 477, 486-489. -   86. Winn, M. D., Ballard, C. C., Cowtan, K. D., Dodson, E. J.,     Emsley, P., Evans, P. R., Keegan, R. M., Krissinel, E. B.,     Leslie, A. G., McCoy, A., et al. (2011). Overview of the CCP4 suite     and current developments. Acta crystallographica Section D,     Biological crystallography 67, 235-242. -   87. Yang, H., Wang, H., Shivalila, C. S., Cheng, A. W., Shi, L., and     Jaenisch, R. (2013). One-step generation of mice carrying reporter     and conditional alleles by CRISPR/Cas-mediated genome engineering.     Cell 154, 1370-1379.

LENGTHY TABLES The patent application contains a lengthy table section. A copy of the table is available in electronic form from the USPTO web site (https://seqdata.uspto.gov/?pageRequest=docDetail&DocID=US20240035007A1). An electronic copy of the table will also be available from the USPTO upon request and payment of the fee set forth in 37 CFR 1.19(b)(3). 

What is claimed is:
 1. A method for modifying a eukaryotic cell, comprising introducing a CRISPR-Cas system into the eukaryotic cell, wherein the CRISPR-Cas system comprises: an engineered Cas9 protein comprising at least one mutation such that the Cas9 protein substantially lacks DNA cleavage activity, or a polynucleotide encoding the Cas9 protein; a chimeric RNA comprising a guide sequence capable of hybridizing to a target sequence in a genomic locus of interest in the eukaryotic cell, and a modified loop comprising an insertion of an aptamer sequence into a tetraloop and/or a stem-loop 2 of the chimeric RNA, or a polynucleotide encoding the chimeric RNA; and an adaptor protein fused to at least one heterologous functional domain, or a polynucleotide encoding the adaptor protein; wherein the Cas9 protein forms a CRISPR complex with the chimeric RNA, wherein the adaptor protein binds to the aptamer sequence, and wherein the guide sequence direct sequence-specific binding of the CRISPR complex to the target sequence.
 2. The method of claim 1, wherein the chimeric RNA comprises at least two modified loops, wherein each modified loop is modified by insertion of an aptamer sequence.
 3. The method of claim 2, wherein the at least two modified loops are modified by insertion of the same aptamer sequence.
 4. The method of claim 2, wherein the at least two modified loops are modified by insertion of different aptamer sequences capable of binding to different adaptor proteins.
 5. The method of claim 2, wherein both tetraloop and stem-loop 2 of the chimeric RNA are modified.
 6. The method of claim 1, wherein the Cas9 protein is fused to at least one nuclear localization signal (NLS).
 7. The method of claim 1, wherein the Cas9 protein is fused to at least two NLSs.
 8. The method of claim 1, wherein the Cas9 comprises at least one mutation in a RuvC domain and at least one mutation in a HNH domain.
 9. The method of claim 8, wherein the mutation in the RuvC domain corresponds to D10A of Streptococcus pyogenes Cas9.
 10. The method of claim 8, wherein the mutation in the HNH domain corresponds to H840A, N854A, or N863A of Streptococcus pyogenes Cas9.
 11. The method of claim 1, wherein the adaptor protein comprises a bacteriophage coat protein of MS2, PP7, Qβ, F2, GA, fr, JP501, M12, R17, BZ13, JP34, JP500, KU1, M11, MX1, TW18, VK, SP, FI, ID2, NL95, TW19, AP205, ϕCb5, ϕCb8r, ϕCb12r, ϕCb23r, 7s, PRR1, or a combination thereof.
 12. The method of claim 1, wherein the adaptor protein comprises a bacteriophage coat protein of MS2 or PP7.
 13. The method of claim 1, wherein the aptamer sequence is a MS2 aptamer sequence or a PP7 aptamer sequence.
 14. The method of claim 1, wherein the heterologous functional domain has at least one of: methylase activity, demethylase activity, transcription activation activity, transcription repression activity, transcription release factor activity, histone modification activity, or a combination thereof.
 15. The method of claim 1, wherein the heterologous functional domain comprises a transcriptional activation domain, a transcriptional repressor domain, or an epigenetic effector domain.
 16. The method of claim 1, wherein the heterologous functional domain comprises VP64, p65, MyoD1, HSF1, RTA, SET7/9, or a combination thereof.
 17. The method of claim 1, wherein the heterologous functional domain comprises KRAB, NuE, NcoR, SID, SID4X, or a combination thereof.
 18. The method of claim 1, wherein the Cas9 protein is fused to at least one heterologous functional domain.
 19. The method of claim 18, wherein the heterologous functional domain has at least one of: methylase activity, demethylase activity, transcription activation activity, transcription repression activity, transcription release factor activity, histone modification activity, or a combination thereof.
 20. The method of claim 1, wherein the CRISPR-Cas system comprises the chimeric RNA and the Cas9 protein.
 21. The method of claim 1, wherein the CRISPR-Cas system comprises the chimeric RNA and an mRNA encoding the Cas9 protein.
 22. The method of claim 1, wherein the CRISPR-Cas system comprises one or more vectors encoding the chimeric RNA and the Cas9 protein.
 23. The method of claim 1, wherein the target sequence is a coding sequence, a promoter sequence, an enhancer sequence, or a silencer sequence.
 24. The method of claim 1, wherein the eukaryotic cell is a mammalian cell or a human cell.
 25. The method of claim 1, further comprising introducing to the eukaryotic cell a further CRISPR-Cas system comprising an engineered Cas9 protein comprising at least one mutation such that the Cas9 protein substantially lacks DNA cleavage activity, wherein the Cas9 protein is fused to at least one heterologous functional domain, or a polynucleotide encoding the Cas9 protein; and a chimeric RNA comprising a guide sequence capable of hybridizing to a target sequence in a genomic locus of interest in the eukaryotic cell, or a polynucleotide encoding the chimeric RNA.
 26. The method of claim 25, wherein the heterologous functional domain has at least one of: methylase activity, demethylase activity, transcription activation activity, transcription repression activity, transcription release factor activity, histone modification activity, or a combination thereof.
 27. The method of claim 25, wherein the heterologous functional domain comprises a transcriptional activation domain, a transcriptional repressor domain, or an epigenetic effector domain.
 28. The method of claim 25, wherein the heterologous functional domain comprises VP64, p65, MyoD1, HSF1, RTA, SET7/9, or a combination thereof.
 29. The method of claim 25, wherein the heterologous functional domain comprises KRAB, NuE, NcoR, SID, SID4X, or a combination thereof.
 30. The method of claim 25, wherein the heterologous functional domain comprises a DNA methyltransferase domain. 